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Leukemia gene normally has mammary gland function

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St. Jude discovers gene linked to highly lethal leukemia when mutated is normally critical for mammary gland function during nursing.

A gene critical for normal mammary gland function during nursing helps trigger highly lethal leukemias when it undergoes a mutation that fuses it to another gene, according to investigators at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.The discovery of the gene’s normal function and that its only major role involves the mammary glands suggests that drugs that might be developed in the future to treat it could also be given to leukemia patients with few serious side effects.A report on this finding appears in the July 19 online posting of the August 6 issue of Molecular and Cellular Biology.The researchers made their discovery while trying to determine the normal functions of a gene called MKL1 (megakaryoblastic leukemia 1), which is part of a mutation that causes acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL) in children, according to Stephan Morris, MD, a member of Pathology and Oncology at St. Jude. AMKL is a leukemia in which megakaryocytes-the bone marrow cells that normally produce the blood platelets that control blood clotting-reproduce uncontrollably. The leukemia mutation, caused by the fusion of MKL1 to the gene RBM15, forms the RBM15-MKL1 fusion gene, according to Morris. AMKL resulting from this mutation usually has only a 20-25 percent survival rate.(Source: Molecular & Cellular Biology: St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital: July 2006).


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Posted On: 26 July, 2006
Modified On: 16 January, 2014

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