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Dive into the research topics where Rachel E. Ibbotson is active.

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Featured researches published by Rachel E. Ibbotson.


The Lancet | 2004

ZAP-70 expression and prognosis in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia

Jenny Orchard; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Zadie Davis; Adrian Wiestner; Andreas Rosenwald; Peter Thomas; Terry Hamblin; Louis M. Staudt; David Oscier

BACKGROUND Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is a heterogeneous disease; many patients never need treatment, whereas some have poor outcomes. New treatments, which can induce complete remissions, allow patients with poor outlook to be treated while they are still asymptomatic. Whether or not the IgVH gene is mutated is the best predictor of clinical outcome, but this assay is unsuited to the routine laboratory. The gene coding for ZAP-70, a tyrosine kinase protein normally expressed in T and NK cells, has been shown by gene-expression profiling to be differentially expressed between patients with mutated and unmutated IgVH genes. We assessed whether ZAP-70 could be used as a prognostic marker in CLL. METHODS We developed a flow cytometry assay for ZAP-70 protein expression and investigated its concordance with ZAP-70 mRNA expression, IgVH gene mutational status, and clinical outcome in 167 patients with CLL. FINDINGS We showed high concordance between ZAP-70 protein expression and IgVH gene mutations. 108 patients (65%) had mutated IgVH genes and were ZAP-70 negative; 46 (28%) had unmutated IgVH genes and were ZAP-70 positive. Findings were discordant in 13 patients: six (4%) had mutated IgVH genes but were ZAP-70 positive, and seven (4%) had unmutated IgVH genes and were ZAP-70 negative. Expression of mRNA showed 97% concordance with ZAP-70 protein. Median survival was 24.4 years (95% CI 15.1-33.8) in ZAP-70 negative patients and 9.3 years (7.0-11.5) in those who were ZAP-70 positive (hazard ratio 5.5, 2.8-.8). INTERPRETATION ZAP-70 protein, which can be measured by flow cytometry in the general laboratory, is a reliable prognostic marker in CLL, equivalent to that of IgVH gene mutational status.


Oncogene | 1997

Cloning of two candidate tumor suppressor genes within a 10 kb region on chromosome 13q14, frequently deleted in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Yie Liu; Martin Corcoran; Omid Rasool; Ganka Ivanova; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Dan Grandér; Arati Iyengar; Anna Baranova; Mats Merup; Xiushan Wu; Anne Gardiner; Roman Müllenbach; Andrew Poltaraus; Anna Linda Hultström; Gunnar Juliusson; Rob D. Chapman; Mary Tiller; Finbarr E. Cotter; Gösta Gahrton; Nick Yankovsky; Eugene R. Zabarovsky; Stefan Einhorn; David Oscier

Previous studies have indicated the presence of a putative tumor suppressor gene on chromosome 13q14, commonly deleted in patients with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). We have previously defined a minimally deleted region of 130 kb centromeric to the marker D13S272, and constructed a PAC and cosmid contig encompassing this area. In the present study we have made a detailed restriction and transcriptional map of the region of interest. Using these tools we have screened a panel of 206 primary CLL clones and three cell lines. In five CLL cases we found limited deletions defining the region of interest to an area of no more than 10 kb. Two adjacent genes, termed Leu1 and Leu2 (leukemia-associated gene 1 and 2), were mapped to the minimally deleted region, with several patients showing deletion borders within these genes. The Leu1 and Leu2 genes show little homology to previously published genes at the nucleotide and expected translated amino acid sequence level. Mutational analysis of the Leu1 and 2 genes in 170 CLL samples revealed no small intragenic mutations or point mutations. However, in all cases of 13q14 loss examined, the first exon of both genes, which are only 300 bp apart, were deleted. We conclude that the Leu1 and Leu2 genes are strong candidates as tumor suppressor gene(s) involved in B-CLL leukemogenesis.


Oncogene | 1999

Dysregulation of cyclin dependent kinase 6 expression in splenic marginal zone lymphoma through chromosome 7q translocations.

Martin Corcoran; Mould Sj; Orchard Ja; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Robert M. Chapman; Boright Ap; Platt C; Tsui Lc; Scherer Sw; David Oscier

The increased or inappropriate expression of genes with oncogenic properties through specific chromosome translocations is an important event in the pathogenesis of B-cell lymphoproliferative diseases. Recent studies have found deletions or translocations of chromosome 7q to be the most common cytogenetic abnormality observed in SLVL, a leukemic variant of SMZL, with the q21 – q22 region being most frequently affected. In three patients with translocations between chromosomes 2 and 7, the cloning of the breakpoints at 7q21 revealed that each was located within a small region of DNA 3.6 kb upstream of the transcription start site of cyclin dependent kinase 6 (CDK6). In each case the translocation event was consistent with aberrant VJ recombination between the immunoglobulin light chain region (Ig kappa) on chromosome 2p12 and DNA sequences at 7q21, resembling the heptamer recombination site. The t(7;21) breakpoint in an additional patient with splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL), resided 66 kb telomeric to the t(2;7) breakpoints juxtaposing CDK6 to an uncharacterized transcript. In two of the SLVL patient samples, the CDK6 protein was found to be markedly over expressed. These results suggest that dysregulation of CDK6 gene expression contributes to the pathogenesis of SLVL and SMZL.


Leukemia | 2010

TP53 mutation profile in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia: Evidence for a disease specific profile from a comprehensive analysis of 268 mutations

Thorsten Zenz; D. Vollmer; Martin Trbušek; Jana Šmardová; Axel Benner; Thierry Soussi; H. Helfrich; M. Heuberger; P. Hoth; M. Fuge; Tina Denzel; S. Häbe; Jitka Malčíková; Petr Kuglík; Sim Truong; Nancy Patten; Lin Wu; David Oscier; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Anne Gardiner; Ian Tracy; Ke Lin; Andrew R. Pettitt; Šárka Pospíšilová; Jiří Mayer; Michael Hallek; Hartmut Döhner; Stephan Stilgenbauer

The TP53 mutation profile in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and the correlation of TP53 mutations with allele status or associated molecular genetics are currently unknown. We performed a large mutation analysis of TP53 at four centers and characterized the pattern of TP53 mutations in CLL. We report on 268 mutations in 254 patients with CLL. Missense mutations appeared in 74% of cases compared with deletions and insertions (20%), nonsense (4%) and splice site (2%) mutations. The majority (243 of 268) of mutations were located in the DNA-binding domain. Transitions were found in 131 of 268 mutations, with only 41 occurring at methylated CpG sites (15%), suggesting that transitions at CpGs are uncommon. The codons most frequently mutated were at positions 175, 179, 248 and 273; in addition, we detected a common 2-nt deletion in the codon 209. Most mutations (199 of 259) were accompanied by deletion of the other allele (17p–). Interestingly, trisomy 12 (without 17p–) was only found in one of 60 cases with TP53 mutation (without 17p–) compared with 60 of 16 in the cohort without mutation (P=0.006). The mutational profile was not different in the cohorts with and without previous therapy, suggesting that the mechanism underlying the development of mutations may be similar, independent of treatment.


Leukemia | 2009

A subset of Binet stage A CLL patients with TP53 abnormalities and mutated IGHV genes have stable disease

O G Best; Anne Gardiner; Zadie Davis; Ian Tracy; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Aneela Majid; Mjs Dyer; David Oscier

TP53 abnormalities consistently emerge as the most significant adverse prognostic factor in multivariate analyses of both prospective and retrospective studies in early and advanced chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL).1 In view of the higher response rates often achieved with alemtuzumab-containing regimens compared with alkylating agent and/or purine analogue therapy2 and the possibility of long-term disease-free survival following allogeneic transplantation in some patients, there is an increasing consensus for screening for TP53 abnormalities in CLL patients who fulfil the International Workshop on Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (IWCLL) recommendations for initiating therapy.


FEBS Letters | 1998

A cosmid and cDNA fine physical map of a human chromosome 13q14 region frequently lost in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and identification of a new putative tumor suppressor gene, Leu5

Bagrat Kapanadze; Anna Baranova; Omid Rasool; Wim van Everdink; Yie Liu; Alexander Syomov; Martin Corcoran; A. B. Poltaraus; Vadim Brodyansky; Natalia Syomova; Alexey Kazakov; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Anke van den Berg; Rinat Gizatullin; Ludmila I. Fedorova; Galina Sulimova; A. V. Zelenin; Larry L. Deaven; Hans Lehrach; Dan Grandér; Charles H.C.M. Buys; David Oscier; Eugene R. Zabarovsky; Stephan Einhorn; Nick Yankovsky

B‐cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B‐CLL) is a human hematological neoplastic disease often associated with the loss of a chromosome 13 region between RB1 gene and locus D13S25. A new tumor suppressor gene (TSG) may be located in the region. A cosmid contig has been constructed between the loci D13S1168 (WI9598) and D13S25 (H2‐42), which corresponds to the minimal region shared by B‐CLL associated deletions. The contig includes more than 200 LANL and ICRF cosmid clones covering 620 kb. Three cDNAs likely corresponding to three different genes have been found in the minimally deleted region, sequenced and mapped against the contigged cosmids. cDNA clone 10k4 as well as a chimeric clone 13g3, codes for a zinc‐finger domain of the RING type and shares homology to some known genes involved in tumorigenesis (RET finger protein, BRCA1) and embryogenesis (MID1). We have termed the gene corresponding to 10k4/13g3 clones LEU5. This is the first gene with homology to known TSGs which has been found in the region of B‐CLL rearrangements.


Blood | 2014

Clonal B-cell lymphocytosis exhibiting immunophenotypic features consistent with a marginal zone origin: is this a distinct entity?

Aliki Xochelli; Christina Kalpadakis; Anne Gardiner; Panagiotis Baliakas; Theodoros P. Vassilakopoulos; Zadie Davis; Evangelia Stalika; George Kanellis; Maria K. Angelopoulou; Neil McIver-Brown; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Sotirios Sachanas; Penelope Korkolopoulou; Anastasia Athanasiadou; Achilles Anagnostopoulos; Helen A. Papadaki; Theodora Papadaki; Kostas Stamatopoulos; Gerassimos A. Pangalis; David Oscier

The biological and clinical significance of a clonal B-cell lymphocytosis with an immunophenotype consistent with marginal-zone origin (CBL-MZ) is poorly understood. We retrospectively evaluated 102 such cases with no clinical evidence to suggest a concurrent MZ lymphoma. Immunophenotyping revealed a clonal B-cell population with Matutes score ≤2 in all cases; 19/102 were weakly CD5 positive and all 35 cases tested expressed CD49d. Bone marrow biopsy exhibited mostly mixed patterns of small B-lymphocytic infiltration. A total of 48/66 (72.7%) cases had an abnormal karyotype. Immunogenetics revealed overusage of the IGHV4-34 gene and somatic hypermutation in 71/79 (89.8%) IGHV-IGHD-IGHJ gene rearrangements. With a median follow-up of 5 years, 85 cases remain stable (group A), whereas 17 cases (group B) progressed, of whom 15 developed splenomegaly. The clonal B-cell count, degree of marrow infiltration, immunophenotypic, or immunogenetic findings at diagnosis did not distinguish between the 2 groups. However, deletions of chromosome 7q were confined to group A and complex karyotypes were more frequent in group B. Although CBL-MZ may antedate SMZL/SLLU, most cases remain stable over time. These cases, not readily classifiable within the World Heath Organization classification, raise the possibility that CBL-MZ should be considered as a new provisional entity within the spectrum of clonal MZ disorders.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2005

ZAP-70 in B cell malignancies

Jenny Orchard; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Giles Best; Anton Parker; David Oscier

ZAP-70 has emerged as a protein of potential prognostic importance in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) following gene expression profiling which compared the 2 well established prognostic sub-sets, those with unmutated and mutated IgVH genes. This protein tyrosine kinase (PTK), known to be of importance in T and NK cell signaling but absent in normal peripheral B cells, is expressed in the majority of the poorer prognosis unmutated CLL and absent in most cases with mutated IgVH genes. ZAP-70 has been shown to be functionally important in the CLL cases in which it is expressed; it is also important in B cell development in mice and there is preliminary evidence for its expression in human B cell progenitors and activated B cells. Whether its expression in a sub-set of CLL cases is a result of a more activated cell type or a reflection of the stage of maturation of the transforming event(s) in CLL is open to debate. ZAP-70 is expressed in a minority of other B cell tumors but correlation with IgVH gene mutational status is lacking. The problems with ZAP-70 measurement, which has yet to be standardized, are reviewed together with its current status as a prognostic marker in CLL.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2004

DLEU2 encodes an antisense RNA for the putative bicistronic RFP2/LEU5 gene in humans and mouse

Martin Corcoran; Marianne Hammarsund; Chaoyong Zhu; Mikael Lerner; Bagrat Kapanadze; Bill Wilson; Catharina Larsson; Lars Forsberg; Rachel E. Ibbotson; Stefan Einhorn; David Oscier; Dan Grandér; Olle Sangfelt

Our group previously identified two novel genes, RFP2/LEU5 and DLEU2, within a 13q14.3 genomic region of loss seen in various malignancies. However, no specific inactivating mutations were found in these or other genes in the vicinity of the deletion, suggesting that a nonclassical tumor‐suppressor mechanism may be involved. Here, we present data showing that the DLEU2 gene encodes a putative noncoding antisense RNA, with one exon directly overlapping the first exon of the RFP2/LEU5 gene in the opposite orientation. In addition, the RFP2/LEU5 transcript can be alternatively spliced to produce either several monocistronic transcripts or a putative bicistronic transcript encoding two separate open‐reading frames, adding to the complexity of the locus. The finding that these gene structures are conserved in the mouse, including the putative bicistronic RFP2/LEU5 transcript as well as the antisense relationship with DLEU2, further underlines the significance of this unusual organization and suggests a biological function for DLEU2 in the regulation of RFP2/LEU5.


Epigenetics | 2011

Methylation markers identify high risk patients in IGHV mutated chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Laura Irving; Tryfonia Mainou-Fowler; Anton Parker; Rachel E. Ibbotson; David Oscier; Gordon Strathdee

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) exhibits a very variable clinical course. Altered DNA methylation of genes has shown promise as a source of novel prognostic makers in a number of cancers. Here we have studied the potential utility of a panel of methylation markers (CD38, HOXA4 and BTG4) in 118 CLL patients. Each of the three loci assessed exhibited frequent methylation, as determined by COBRA analysis, and individually correlated with either good (CD38, BTG4 methylation) or poor (HOXA4 methylation) prognosis. Using a combined approach to produce an overall methylation score, we found that methylation score was significantly associated with time to first treatment in CLL patients. Multivariate Cox regression analysis revealed that methylation score was the strongest predictor of time to first treatment, and was independent of IGHV gene mutational status and CD38 expression. This study provides proof of principle that a panel of methylation markers can be used for additional risk stratification of CLL patients.

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David Oscier

Royal Bournemouth Hospital

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Anne Gardiner

Royal Bournemouth Hospital

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Zadie Davis

Royal Bournemouth Hospital

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Jenny Orchard

Royal Bournemouth Hospital

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Robert M. Chapman

Royal Bournemouth Hospital

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