4.7 Article

Whole-genome optical mapping of bone-marrow myeloma cells reveals association of extramedullary multiple myeloma with chromosome 1 abnormalities

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-93835-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. research Grant Celgene [CZE_102]
  2. Internal Grant Agency of Palacky University [IGA_ LF_2021_ 015]
  3. Ministry of Health of Czech Republic-RVO [00098892, NV18-03-00500]

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The research identified an association between extramedullary disease (EMM) and chromosome 1 abnormalities at the genomic level, distinguishing it from intramedullary multiple myeloma (MM). EMM patients showed more deletions and fewer interchromosomal translocations in their genomic structure, as well as copy number loss in the 17p13 region.
Extramedullary disease (EMM) represents a rare, aggressive and mostly resistant phenotype of multiple myeloma (MM). EMM is frequently associated with high-risk cytogenetics, but their complex genomic architecture is largely unexplored. We used whole-genome optical mapping (Saphyr, Bionano Genomics) to analyse the genomic architecture of CD138+ cells isolated from bone-marrow aspirates from an unselected cohort of newly diagnosed patients with EMM (n=4) and intramedullary MM (n=7). Large intrachromosomal rearrangements (>5 Mbp) within chromosome 1 were detected in all EMM samples. These rearrangements, predominantly deletions with/without inversions, encompassed hundreds of genes and led to changes in the gene copy number on large regions of chromosome 1. Compared with intramedullary MM, EMM was characterised by more deletions (size range of 500 bp-50 kbp) and fewer interchromosomal translocations, and two EMM samples had copy number loss in the 17p13 region. Widespread genomic heterogeneity and novel aberrations in the high-risk IGH/IGK/IGL, 8q24 and 13q14 regions were detected in individual patients but were not specific to EMM/MM. Our pilot study revealed an association of chromosome 1 abnormalities in bone marrow myeloma cells with extramedullary progression. Optical mapping showed the potential for refining the complex genomic architecture in MM and its phenotypes.

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