Mutations in a gene encoding a midbody kelch protein in familial and sporadic classical Hodgkin lymphoma lead to binucleated cells. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) is a malignancy of B-cell origin in which the neoplastic cells, known as "Reed-Sternberg" (RS) cells, are characteristically binucleated. Here we describe a family where multiple individuals developing cHL have inherited a reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 2 and 3. The translocation disrupts KLHDC8B, an uncharacterized gene from a region (3p21.31) previously implicated in lymphoma and related malignancies, resulting in its loss of expression. We tested KLHDC8B as a candidate gene for cHL and found that a 5'-UTR polymorphism responsible for decreasing its translational expression is associated with cHL in probands from other families with cHL and segregates with disease in those pedigrees. In one of three informative sporadic cases of cHL, we detected loss of heterozygosity (LOH) for KLHDC8B in RS cells, but not reactive T lymphocytes, purified from a malignant lymph node. KLHDC8B encodes a protein predicted to contain seven kelch repeat domains. KLHDC8B is expressed during mitosis, where it localizes to the midbody structure connecting cells about to separate during cytokinesis, and it is degraded after cell division. Depletion of KLHDC8B through RNA interference leads to an increase in binucleated cells, implicating its reduced expression in the formation of cHL's signature RS cell.

publication date

  • August 12, 2009

Research

keywords

  • Antigens, Neoplasm
  • Cell Nucleus
  • Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2
  • Chromosomes, Human, Pair 3
  • Hodgkin Disease
  • Mutation

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2736436

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 70349279998

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1073/pnas.0904231106

PubMed ID

  • 19706467

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 106

issue

  • 35