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. 1986 Apr;38(4):520-32.

T-lymphocytes with 7;14 translocations: frequency of occurrence, breakpoints, and clinical and biological significance

T-lymphocytes with 7;14 translocations: frequency of occurrence, breakpoints, and clinical and biological significance

G W Dewald et al. Am J Hum Genet. 1986 Apr.

Abstract

Among 11,915 consecutive patients and 37 normal controls who had chromosome analysis at the Mayo Clinic between 1978 and 1984, 83 had a single sporadic metaphase with a 7;14 translocation. In 81 of the translocations, the breakpoints were at 14q11 and either 7q34 (type I) or 7p13 (type II): type I translocations occurred in 42 patients, and type II, in 39. The two other translocations had different breakpoints: one was t(7;14)(q11;q32), and the other was t(7;14)(p13;q32). All type I and type II translocations occurred in phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocyte cultures; their combined incidence was 4.88 X 10(-4) per metaphase (81 of 165,991 metaphases) in such cultures. No type I or II translocation was found among 6,713 fibroblast metaphases, 33,463 amniocyte metaphases, or 68,972 bone marrow and unstimulated peripheral blood metaphases. One variant 7;14 translocation occurred in a phytohemagglutinin-stimulated culture, and the other occurred in a fibroblast culture. We did not find a correlation of sporadic 7;14 translocations with any month or season of the year or with patient age or sex. Of the 83 patients, 78 had various clinical disorders, three had ataxia-telangiectasia, one was a normal control, and one was an artificial insemination donor. Follow-up studies on 64 (77%) patients indicate that, to date, none have developed any malignant process subsequent to chromosome analysis. Except for ataxia-telangiectasia, the occurrence of types I and II translocations in lymphocyte cultures may have little, if any, clinical significance. The biological significance of these translocations may be the association of genes in chromosome bands 14q11, 7p13, and 7q34 with the normal physiology of lymphocytes such as the alpha- and beta-chains for T-cell antigen receptor.

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