Abstract
NIARD (non-immunoglobulin-associated rearranging DNA) is located on mouse chromosome 15 at the break point of a commonly observed translocation event involving chromosomes 15 and 12 in murine plasmacytomas. The human cellular analogue of the v-myc oncogene of avian myelocytomatosis virus, strain MC-29, is known to reside on the distal end of human chromosome 8 and has been observed to translocate to chromosome 14 in Burkitt lymphomas. Using a cDNA clone specific for the transcript of the human c-myc gene (Hc-myc), we show that the mouse c-myc (M c-myc) gene is contained within NIARD. NIARD-associated chromosome translocations occurred 1.3-2 kilobases (kb) 5' of the mouse c-myc gene where NIARD recombines with the switch region of the C(α) immunoglobulin gene in various murine plasmacytomas. The mouse c-myc encoding region within NIARD spanned <2.4 kb of DNA and expressed a low level of a 2.3-kb polyadenylylated RNA in BALB/c spleen. Increased (10- to 20-fold) levels of rearranged mouse c-myc transcripts (i.e., ≃1.8-2.1 kb) were observed in plasmacytomas that have NIARD-associated chromosome translocations. Human c-myc and NIARD probes detected DNA rearrangements of human c-myc in four of seven Burkitt lymphomas. DNA sequences adjacent to the human c-myc gene recombined with the C(μ) immunoglobulin gene locus on chromosome 14 in several Burkitt lymphomas. The activation of the c-myc oncogene by chromosome translocation implicates its involvement in B-cell oncogenesis.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 519-523 |
Number of pages | 5 |
Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
Volume | 80 |
Issue number | 2 I |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1983 |
Externally published | Yes |