Familial Myeloproliferative Disorders
2015-09-01 Christine Bellanné-Chantelot  , Isabelle Plo   AffiliationAbstract
Review on Familial Myeloproliferative Disorders, with data on clinics, and the genes involved.
Identity
Name
Familial Myeloproliferative Disorders
Alias
Familial myeloproliferative neoplasms , Hereditary erythrocytosis , Hereditary thrombocytosis
Note
Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) are clonal and chronic hematological malignancies caused by genetic defects that result in overproduction of one or several myeloid lineages (erythroïd, megakaryocytic and granulocytic lineages). The classic MPN or Ph-chromosome-negative MPN include polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythemia (ET), and primary myelofibrosis (PMF).
, Familial MPN are estimated to 2 to 10% according to studies.
, They are divided in two overlapping entities:
, - True MPN disorders with germline predisposition that are familial clustering of MPN with autosomal dominant inheritance and incomplete penetrance. These familial cases are indistinguishable from the sporadic cases of MPN in terms of clinical features and acquired genetic abnormalities.
, - Hereditary MPN-like disorders with clinical symptoms of MPN but affecting a single lineage involvement. They include hereditary thrombocytosis ( THPO, MPL, JAK2 genes), hereditary erythrocytosis ( EPOR, VHL, EGLN1 and EPAS1 genes) and hereditary neutrophilia (CSF3R gene). These hereditary disorders are non-malignant diseases and have distinct features: polyclonal hematopoiesis, absence of disease progression and autosomal dominant inheritance with complete penetrance.
, Familial MPN are estimated to 2 to 10% according to studies.
, They are divided in two overlapping entities:
, - True MPN disorders with germline predisposition that are familial clustering of MPN with autosomal dominant inheritance and incomplete penetrance. These familial cases are indistinguishable from the sporadic cases of MPN in terms of clinical features and acquired genetic abnormalities.
, - Hereditary MPN-like disorders with clinical symptoms of MPN but affecting a single lineage involvement. They include hereditary thrombocytosis ( THPO, MPL, JAK2 genes), hereditary erythrocytosis ( EPOR, VHL, EGLN1 and EPAS1 genes) and hereditary neutrophilia (CSF3R gene). These hereditary disorders are non-malignant diseases and have distinct features: polyclonal hematopoiesis, absence of disease progression and autosomal dominant inheritance with complete penetrance.
Inheritance
Most of familial MPN are compatible with an autosomal dominant with incomplete penetrance. However, an autosomal recessive pattern has been suggested by some authors and could not be excluded.
Omim
187950 , 254450 , 601626
Clinics
Phenotype and clinics
Familial MPN include the three classic MPN or Ph-chromosome-negative MPN: PV, ET, and PMF. Patients with familial MPN have the same clinical presentation at diagnosis as patients with sporadic MPN. They develop the same type of complications (thrombosis and hemorrhage) and disease evolution (post-PV myelofibrosis, post-ET myelofibrosis, and acute myeloid leukemia). The distribution of MPN phenotypes within MPN families is homogeneous in half of cases (all affected family cases have the same MPN).
Neoplastic risk
RISK increased of transformation to acute myeloid leukemia (AML)
Treatment
The recommendations are those used for sporadic MPNS. In low-risk patients, phlebotomy in PV patients and low-dose aspirin in ET patients are recommended. In the presence of risk factors for thrombosis, hydroxyurea is used as first-line treatment and busulfan or interferon-α as second-line. Novel therapies based on JAK2 inhibitors have been developed and up to date, are restricted to patients with myelofibrosis.
Evolution
The main cause of death is the evolution to myelofibrosis and AML. In familial cases, the incidence annual rate of AML has been estimated to 1.25% patients\/year for PV and 0.68% patients\/year for ET.
Prognosis
Familial PV: 83% of overall survival at 10 years; Familial ET: 84% to 100% of overall survival at 10 years; Familial PMF: 30% of overall survival at 10 years.
Cytogenetics
Acquired condition
Chromosomal aberrations observed in familial MPN are similar to those reported in sporadic cases. About two-third of MPN harbor at least one chromosomal aberration. Some of them are more specifically acquired with disease progression to secondary myelofibrosis such as uniparental disomy (UPD) of 9p, gain of 1q whereas others are more frequently associated with post-MPN acute myeloid leukemia such as gain of 1q, deletions of 7q, 5q, 6p, 7p, 3q and UPD of 19q and 22q.
Other Findings
Note
MPNs are driven by at least one somatic acquired mutation (V617F in JAK2 or mutations in MPL and CALR for ET and PMF) and mutations in epigenetic regulators such as
Genes involved and Proteins
Dna description
Encoded in 18 exons spanning 33.2 Kb.
Transcription
NM_006910.4 encodes the longest transcript.
Description
Protein of 1792 amino acids.
Function
Possible link to P53 function.
Germinal
All mutations located in the putative p53-binding region.
Note
Cooperates with GSKIP, also located in 14q32.2 and included in the 700 kb duplication NC_000014.9:g.95696766_96390792dup (on Assembly GRCh38).
Dna description
Encoded in 42 exons spanning 82 Kb.
Transcription
Unique transcript NM_018036.
Description
Protein of 2078 amino acids.
Expression
Expressed in CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors and during erythroïd and megakaryocyte differentiation.
Function
Overexpression of ATG2B enhances hematopoietic progenitor differentiation, particularly in megacaryocytes and cooperates with classical driver mutations.
Note
Founder defect in families originated from West-Indies.
Germinal
Head-to-tail 700 kb tandem duplication (g.95696766_96390792dup).
Somatic
Associated with classical driver mutations such as V617F in JAK2, W515L in MPL and 1099_1050del52 in CALR and with an increased frequency of mutations in TET2, IDH1 and IDH2.
Alias
C14orf129
Note
Cooperates with ATG2B, also located in 14q32.2 and included in the 700 kb duplication NC_000014.9:g.95696766_96390792dup (on Assembly GRCh38).
Dna description
Encoded in 3 exons spanning 7 Kb.
Transcription
NM_001271904 encodes the longest transcript; 3 other transcripts encode the same protein with differences in the 5UTR.
Description
Protein of 139 amino acids.
Expression
in CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors and during erythroïd and megakaryocyte differentiation.
Function
Overexpression of GSKIP enhances hematopoietic progenitor differentiation, particularly of megacaryocytes and cooperates with classical driver mutations.
Note
Founder defect in families originated from West-Indies.
Germinal
Head-to-tail 700 kb tandem duplication (g.95696766_96390792dup).
Somatic
Associated with classical driver mutations such as V617F in JAK2, W515L in MPL and 1099_1050del52 in CALR and with an increased frequency of mutations in TET2, IDH1 and IDH2.
Dna description
Encoded in 16 exons spanning 42 Kb.
Transcription
NM_198253.2 encodes the longest isoform (1); a shorter isoform lacking an alternate in-frame exon in the middle portion of the coding exon is also reported.
Description
Protein of 1132 amino acids.
Expression
Blood cells.
Function
Telomerase activity, essential for maintaining telomere length.
Germinal
Allele C of SNP rs2736100, located in the second intron of the TERT gene, is associated with an increased risk for MPN (PV, ET and PMF).
To be noted
Note
Germline duplication of ATG2B and GSKIP predispose with a high penetrance (above 80%) to several myeloid malignancies, particularly essential thrombocythemia frequently progressing to AML.
RBBP6 germline gain-of-function mutations mostly associated with primary myelofibrosis, observed in 5% of the familial and 0.6% of the sporadic MPN cases.
TERT rs2736100_C risk allele is significantly associated with familial MPN, whatever the subtype (PV, ET and PMF
RBBP6 germline gain-of-function mutations mostly associated with primary myelofibrosis, observed in 5% of the familial and 0.6% of the sporadic MPN cases.
TERT rs2736100_C risk allele is significantly associated with familial MPN, whatever the subtype (PV, ET and PMF
Databases
http:\/\/www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov\/clinvar\/variation\/208237\/ ClinVar : SCV000224007-4010
Article Bibliography
| Pubmed ID | Last Year | Title | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16537803 | 2006 | Genetic and clinical implications of the Val617Phe JAK2 mutation in 72 families with myeloproliferative disorders. | Bellanné-Chantelot C et al |
| 19474426 | 2009 | Mutation in TET2 in myeloid cancers. | Delhommeau F et al |
| 23009936 | 2012 | Role of germline genetic factors in MPN pathogenesis. | Harutyunyan AS et al |
| 25196853 | 2014 | Common germline variation at the TERT locus contributes to familial clustering of myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Jäger R et al |
| 19287382 | 2009 | JAK2 haplotype is a major risk factor for the development of myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Jones AV et al |
| 23926457 | 2013 | Inherited predisposition to myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Jones AV et al |
| 24325356 | 2013 | Somatic mutations of calreticulin in myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Klampfl T et al |
| 21531982 | 2011 | Genome integrity of myeloproliferative neoplasms in chronic phase and during disease progression. | Klampfl T et al |
| 18754034 | 2008 | Genetic complexity of myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Kralovics R et al |
| 19287385 | 2009 | A common JAK2 haplotype confers susceptibility to myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Olcaydu D et al |
| 21173100 | 2011 | The role of the JAK2 GGCC haplotype and the TET2 gene in familial myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Olcaydu D et al |
| 25486952 | 2014 | Myeloproliferative neoplasms: JAK2 signaling pathway as a central target for therapy. | Pasquier F et al |
| 24553179 | 2014 | CALR exon 9 mutations are somatically acquired events in familial cases of essential thrombocythemia or primary myelofibrosis. | Rumi E et al |
| 19564637 | 2009 | Analysis of the ten-eleven translocation 2 (TET2) gene in familial myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Saint-Martin C et al |
| 26280900 | 2015 | Germline duplication of ATG2B and GSKIP predisposes to familial myeloid malignancies. | Saliba J et al |
| 25872987 | 2015 | New and treatment-relevant risk stratification for thrombosis in essential thrombocythemia and polycythemia vera. | Tefferi A et al |
| 21653328 | 2011 | New mutations and pathogenesis of myeloproliferative neoplasms. | Vainchenker W et al |
External Links
Citation
Christine Bellanné-Chantelot ; Isabelle Plo
Familial Myeloproliferative Disorders
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2015-09-01
Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/cancer-prone-disease/10180/familial-myeloproliferative-disorders
