Chromosome Translocations and Cancer
Chromosome Translocations and Cancer
Chromosome Translocations and Cancer
Translocations generate novel chromosomes, but are often linked to disorders like infertility
and cancer. How do these new chromosomes generate problems, and how are they
detected?
With the development of genetic and cytological models in the early twentieth century, the existence of
translocations became firmly established. Geneticists had discovered that genes were physically linked on
chromosomes, and that the strength of genetic linkage could be used to provide a rough map of each
chromosome. Occasionally, however, geneticists discovered mutations in which genes from two different
chromosomes behaved as if they were physically linked. Furthermore, the number of these mutations could be
increased by orders of magnitude when organisms were treated with X-rays. Examination of these organisms'
chromosomes provided an explanation for the appearance of novel linkage groups; specifically, new
chromosomes had appeared, and existing chromosomes had been altered. Moreover, in organisms like
Drosophila and maize, for which cytological markers were available, scientists observed that the novel
chromosomes contained parts of normal chromosomes. Thus, they were able to infer that breaks had
occurred in normal chromosomes, and that the broken ends of nonhomologous chromosomes had fused
together, producing translocations.
These early observations provided the foundation for our modern understanding of translocations. We now
appreciate that translocations require double-strand breaks (DSBs) in DNA at two locations. The frequency of
these DSBs is greatly increased by ionizing radiation, which is still used experimentally to generate
translocations. Cells are not tolerant of DSBs; these breaks cause cells to arrest in mitosis or to undergo
apoptosis. Therefore, the appearance of DSBs activates the cellular DNA repair machinery that catalyzes the
1/5
5/30/2019
joining of broken chromosome ends (Lieber et al., 2003). A variety of rearrangements can result from this
joining. For instance, precise joining of broken ends can regenerate a normal chromosome. Deletions,
duplications, and inversions can occur when joining involves two broken ends on the same chromosome.
Furthermore, translocations may occur when the broken ends of two nonhomologous chromosomes are joined
together. Nonhomologous end joining is often imprecise, so some nucleotides may be lost altogether during
the joining process.
2/5
5/30/2019
Yet another category of translocations is Robertsonian translocations (Figure 1b), in which the long q arms of
two acrocentric chromosomes become joined at a single centromere. Chromosome p arms are lost during
Robertsonian translocations, but because acrocentric chromosomes have very short p arms that are repetitive,
there are no phenotypic consequences. Figure 1b depicts a Robertsonian translocation between
chromosomes 14 and 21 that has generated the derivative chromosome der(14; 21). This particular
translocation is interesting because it is commonly observed in patients with the familial form of Down
syndrome. Familial Down syndrome is much less common than the form in which patients have 47
chromosomes due to the presence of an extra full copy of chromosome 21. Patients with familial Down
syndrome have 46 chromosomes, including two normal copies of chromosome 21 and a Robertsonian
translocation with chromosome 21 material. Familial Down patients usually inherit the translocation
chromosome from an unaffected parent, who has only 45 chromosomes, including the Robertsonian
chromosome and one normal copy of chromosome 21.
Figure 2 shows an example of a spectral karyotype prepared from acute myeloid leukemia cells with multiple
translocations, which are indicated by arrows. The image obtained in the microscope (Figure 2a) was
processed by a computer to generate a false-color image (Figure 2b) that depicts each chromosome in a
distinctive color. The chromosomes were then arranged into a karyotype. Figure 2c shows portions of the
karyotype in which translocation chromosomes were placed next to their normal homologues. At least 30
rearrangements were observed in this cell, and some of the chromosomes underwent multiple translocations.
Spectral karyotypes lack the spatial detail of Giemsa-stained karyotypes, so it is not possible to define the
translocation breakpoints. Nonetheless, FISH is useful because it can reveal small translocations that would
not be possible to detect with banding.
3/5
5/30/2019
configuration. These gametes are aneuploid, with an excess of some genes and
deficiencies in others. Only alternate segregation produces euploid gametes, which contain either both
translocation products or two normal chromosomes. Statistically, aneuploid gametes should outnumber
euploid gametes, so translocation carriers have an elevated risk of having children with mental retardation and
other birth defects linked to aneuploidy. If the aneuploidies are severe enough to cause embryonic lethality,
translocation carriers may also appear to have problems with fertility.
In other cancers, translocations fuse the coding sequences of two genes together to generate potent
oncogenes (Figure 4b). An example of historic interest is the Philadelphia chromosome, which was initially
identified as a minute, or unusually small, chromosome in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML).
With the advent of chromosome banding techniques, Janet Rowley was able to show that the Philadelphia
chromosome was actually a product of a reciprocal translocation involving small segments at the ends of the q
arms of chromosomes 9 and 22 (Rowley, 1973). Subsequent molecular analyses involving multiple
laboratories revealed that the translocation fused the coding sequence of the BCR (breakpoint cluster region)
gene on chromosome 22 with the coding sequence of the ABL gene on chromosome 9. The BCR-ABL fusion
protein encoded by the chimeric gene is a protein tyrosine kinase that constitutively activates signaling
pathways involved in cell growth and proliferation. Knowledge of this particular breakpoint has led to a
successful treatment for CML, because investigators were able to use the sequence information to
4/5
5/30/2019
overexpress and crystallize the BCR-ABL protein, which in turn led to the development of drugs that inhibit this
protein's activity.
Hundreds of translocations have now been linked to cancer, and this information has been catalogued and is
freely available online to cytogeneticists. The database continues to grow as investigators uncover new links
between genes, chromosomes, and cancer. It is interesting to consider that approximately one century has
elapsed since Theodor Boveri predicted that growth-stimulatory chromosomes were present in cancer cells.
Scientists continue to identify new molecular rearrangements that occur in cancer, with the hope that this
information will translate into new treatments for a devastating disease.
Balmain, A. Cancer genetics: From Boveri and Mendel to microarrays. Nature Reviews Cancer 1, 77–82 (2001) doi:10.1038/35094086 (link to
article)
Lieber, M. R., et al. Mechanism and regulation of human non-homologous end-joining. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 4, 712–720 (2003)
doi:10.1038/nrm1202 (link to article)
Rowley, J. D. A new consistent chromosomal abnormality in chronic myelogeneous leukemia identified by quinacrine fluorescence and Giemsa
staining. Nature 243, 290–293 (1973) doi:10.1038/243290a0 (link to article)
———. Chromosome translocations: Dangerous liaisons revisited. Nature Reviews Cancer 1, 245–250 (2001) doi:10.1038/35106108 (link to
article)
5/5