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. 1993 Jan;3(1):67-72.
doi: 10.1038/ng0193-67.

Evidence for a new tumour suppressor locus (DBM) in human B-cell neoplasia telomeric to the retinoblastoma gene

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Evidence for a new tumour suppressor locus (DBM) in human B-cell neoplasia telomeric to the retinoblastoma gene

A G Brown et al. Nat Genet. 1993 Jan.

Abstract

Roughly 25% of human B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemias (CLL) are characterized by a chromosomal lesion involving 13q14. This region contains the retinoblastoma gene (RB1). We have used a variety of techniques to determine whether RB1 or some other locus is the critical region in 11 cases of low grade B-cell malignancy (mainly CLL), all with deletions or translocations involving 13q14. In all cases, except the one with minimal disease, there was deletion or a structural lesion in the region of D13S25, with at least 4 cases showing homozygous disruption. We conclude that D13S25 lies close to a tumour suppressor locus whose inactivation contributes to the initiation or progression of low grade B-cell malignancy. This locus is located at least 530 kilobases telomeric to RB1.

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