Anaplastic large cell lymphoma causes

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Causes

ALK negative ALCL is characterized by a translocation T(6;7)(p25.3;q32.3), which inactivates the DUSP22 gene and leads to a higher proliferation rate.[1] In healthy people, the product of the DUSP22 gene, the DUSP22 protein (also known as the JNK pathway-associated phosphatase or JKAP), inactivates the LCK tyrosine kinase protein during T-cell receptor signaling.[2]

DUSP22 mutations are also associated with breast cancer (the UDSMP22 protein can also block estrogen receptors)[3] and primary cutaneous ALCL.[4]

References

  1. Feldman AL, Dogan A, Smith DI, Law ME, Ansell SM, Johnson SH; et al. (2011). "Discovery of recurrent t(6;7)(p25.3;q32.3) translocations in ALK-negative anaplastic large cell lymphomas by massively parallel genomic sequencing". Blood. 117 (3): 915–9. doi:10.1182/blood-2010-08-303305. PMC 3035081. PMID 21030553.
  2. "The phosphatase JKAP/DUSP22 inhibits T-cell receptor signalling and autoimmunity by inactivating Lck".
  3. "Discovery of recurrent t(6;7)(p25.3;q32.3) translocations in ALK-negative anaplastic large cell lymphomas by massively parallel genomic sequencing".
  4. Xing X, Feldman AL (2015). "Anaplastic large cell lymphomas: ALK positive, ALK negative, and primary cutaneous". Adv Anat Pathol. 22 (1): 29–49. doi:10.1097/PAP.0000000000000047. PMID 25461779.

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