Caracterização molecular de variantes no gene JAK2 em pacientes com neoplasias mieloproliferativas crônicas BCR/ABL1 negativo
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Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
Resumo
BCR/ABL1 negative chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms are clonal diseases
caused by aberrant proliferation of hematopoietic cells in the bone marrow and excessive
accumulation of mature blood elements in peripheral blood. Polycythemia vera, essential
thrombocythemia and primary myelofibrosis are the most classic entities within this
classification of hematological diseases, which have in common genetic rearrangements in one
of the main intracellular signaling pathways: the JAK2/STAT5 pathway. The JAK2 gene
encodes the Janus kinase 2 (JAK2) protein, involved in cell proliferation and differentiation
processes. JAK2V617F is the most frequent and most studied variant in this group of diseases
due to its ability to generate several clinical phenotypes. Variants on exon 12 of the JAK2 gene
are screened in JAK2V617F negative individuals, comprising approximately 3% of cases.
Although JAK2V617F and JAK2 exon 12 variants are the main research targets in BCR/ABL1
negative Chronic Myeloproliferative Neoplasms, new variants throughout the gene have been
identified. Objective: The study aimed to molecularly characterize variants in the JAK2 gene
in patients with BCR/ABL1 negative Chronic Myeloproliferative Neoplasms: Polycythemia
vera, Essential Thrombocythemia and Myelofibrosis. Methodology: We evaluated 75 patients
diagnosed with BCR/ABL1 negative myeloproliferative neoplasms: Polycythemia vera,
Essential Thrombocythemia and Myelofibrosis. Clinical data were obtained from medical
records. Laboratory data were obtained from sample collections during the follow-up of
subjects. Molecular evaluation was performed using conventional Polymerase Chain Reaction
and Sanger Sequencing to detect variants in the coding region of the JAK2 gene. Statistical
analysis of categorical variables was performed using the Chi-Square test. Kruskal-Wallis and
Mann-Whitney tests were used to analyze numerical variables, when convenient. p <0.05 values
were considered statistically significant. Results: Sanger sequencing demonstrated the presence
of rs907414891, rs2230722, rs2230723, rs10119726, rs576746768, rs77375493
(JAK2V617F), rs2230728, rs2230724, rs41316003 and rs55930140 in the coding region of the
JAK2 gene, considering rs77375493 the most frequent variant in individuals with Polycythemia
vera. Coexistence of variants was detected in Polycythemia vera and Thrombocythemia, with
the combination of variants rs2230722/rs77375493/rs2230724 being the most predominant in
both hematological diseases with evidence of alterations in hematological parameters.
Conclusions: Individuals with BCR/ABL1 negative chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms with
the rs2230724, rs2230722 and rs77375493 variants both separately and together show slight
alterations in the clinical-laboratory profile, especially in concomitance with the rs77375493
variant, demonstrating involvement in the instability of regulatory mechanisms at the protein
level and possibly the myeloproliferative phenotype