Detection of major bcr-abl gene expression at a very low level in blood cells of some healthy individuals

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Abstract

The major bcr-abl fusion gene is presently seen as the hallmark of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and presumably as the cause of its development. Accordingly, long-term disappearance of bcr-abl after intensive therapy is considered to be a probable cure of CML. The nested reverse transcriptase- polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) provides a powerful tool for minimal residual CML detection. The RT-PCR was optimized by (1) increasing the amount of total RNA involved in the reverse transcription reaction to correspond to total RNA extracted from 108 cells, (2) using a specific abl primer in this reverse reaction, and (3) reamplifying 10% of the RT-PCR product in nested amplification. This optimized RT-PCR permitted us to detect up to 1 copy of RNA bcr-abl synthezised in vitro, mixed with yeast RNA in an equivalent quantity to 108 white blood cells (WBCs). Using this highly sensitive RT- PCR during the follow-up of CML patients, a signal was unexpectedly found in healthy controls. Therefore, a systematic study of the possible expression of bcr-abl RNA in the WBCs of healthy adults and children and in umbilical cord blood was undertaken. It showed the presence of bcr-abl transcript in the blood of 22 of 73 healthy adults and in the blood of 1 of 22 children but not in 22 samples of umbilical cord blood.

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Biernaux, C., Loos, M., Sels, A., Huez, G., & Stryckmans, P. (1995). Detection of major bcr-abl gene expression at a very low level in blood cells of some healthy individuals. Blood, 86(8), 3118–3122. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v86.8.3118.3118

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