4.1 Article

Activation of the Chromosome 19q MicroRNA Cluster in Sporadic and Androgenetic-Biparental Mosaicism-Associated Hepatic Mesenchymal Hamartoma

Journal

PEDIATRIC AND DEVELOPMENTAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 75-84

Publisher

ALLIANCE COMMUNICATIONS GROUP DIVISION ALLEN PRESS
DOI: 10.2350/13-12-1415-OA.1

Keywords

androgenetic; imprinting; mesenchymal hamartoma; microRNA; uniparental disomy

Funding

  1. Academic Enrichment Fund award from the Seattle Children's Hospital

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Recurrent genetic alterations found in hepatic mesenchymal hamartoma include either androgenetic-biparental mosaicism or chromosomal rearrangements involving chromosome 19q13.4, in the vicinity of the chromosome 19q microRNA cluster (C19MC). Abnormal activation of C19MC, which is subject to paternal imprinting and is normally expressed only in placenta, could account for both genetic associations because androgenetic cells carry only paternal chromosomes. In this study, a 4.2-Mb deletion involving the 5'-end of C19MC was detected in a sporadic mesenchymal hamartoma by chromosomal microarray. Fluorescence in situ hybridization studies showed that the deletion localized to mesenchymal cells in the stroma of the hamartoma. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis of this tumor, 9 other sporadic hepatic mesenchymal hamartomas, and 3 hamartomas associated with androgenetic-biparental mosaicism demonstrated C19MC microRNA expression in all but 2 sporadic cases, with no significant expression in control liver. The findings support a pathogenetic model for mesenchymal hamartoma as a consequence of ectopic'' activation of C19MC in hepatic stroma, due to either chromosomal rearrangements or paternal uniparental disomy.

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