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Myeloid leukaemia of Down syndrome (ML-DS) is an acute megakaryoblastic/erythroid leukaemia uniquely found in children with Down syndrome (constitutive trisomy 21). It has a unique clinical course, being preceded by a pre-leukaemic condition known as transient abnormal myelopoiesis (TAM), and provides an excellent model to study multistep leukaemogenesis. Both TAM and ML-DS blasts carry acquired N-terminal truncating mutations in the erythro-megakaryocytic transcription factor GATA1. These result in exclusive production of a shorter isoform (GATA1s). The majority of TAM cases resolve spontaneously without the need for treatment; however, around 10% acquire additional cooperating mutations and transform to leukaemia, with differentiation block and clinically significant cytopenias. Transformation is driven by the acquisition of additional mutation(s), which cooperate with GATA1s to perturb normal haematopoiesis.

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/iub.2197

Type

Journal article

Journal

IUBMB Life

Publication Date

01/2020

Volume

72

Pages

119 - 130

Keywords

Gata1, acute myeloid leukaemia, cohesin, trisomy 21, Down Syndrome, GATA1 Transcription Factor, Humans, Leukemia, Myeloid, Mutation