Recent studies have revealed a rearrangement of a novel homeobox-containing gene called TCL-3 or HOX11 on 10q24 in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia with the specific chromosome translocation t(10;14)(q24;q11), and thus the significance of 10q24 aberrations in leukemogenesis is indicated.
To better understand the pathogenetic role of HOX11 in leukemogenesis, post 5-fluorouracil-treated murine bone marrow cells were infected with a replication-defective retrovirus bearing the gene.
These data indicate that HOX11 lymphoma cells express tumor-rejection antigens that are recognized as foreign in healthy transgenic mice and that lymphomagenesis is associated with the induction of anergy to tumor antigen-specific T cells.
It is one of the most frequently deregulated genes in T-ALL, although the precise role of HOX11 in leukemogenesis as well as in normal development remains obscure.
Here, we report that TLX1 and MEIS proteins both interact and are co-expressed in T-ALL, and suggest that co-operation between TLX1 and MEIS proteins may have a significant role in T-cell leukemogenesis.