Childhood leukemia is the most common cancer among persons under 15 years of age, accounting for > 30% of all childhood malignancies [
1]. In developed countries, 8 of 10 children diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) will survive 5 years or longer due to treatment assignments based on presenting age, white blood cell count, extramedullary disease, blast cytogenetics, and initial treatment response [
2]. These risk stratification categories for ALL are still evolving, however, and treatment failures occur in 10–15% of lower risk patients [
3]. Like-wise, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients are often risk-stratified based on molecular cytogenetics and treatment response; nonetheless, the most recent Children’s Oncology Group trial reported a 5-year survival of 58% for pediatric AML [
4]. Even with aggressive retrieval therapy, most children for whom leukemia treatment fails will die [
5], and relapsed leukemia remains one of the leading causes of mortality for children with cancer. Robust biomarkers for risk of relapse are needed, so that children with leukemia can be risk-stratified as accurately as possible at the time of diagnosis [
3,
6].
Aneuploidy and translocation events are gross indicators of genomic instability events associated with ALL. Array comparative genomic hybridization methods have significantly higher resolution in identifying copy number aberrations (CNAs), compared with conventional cytogenetic analysis, and as a result their application in ALL have led to the discovery of CNAs within specific intervals of the genome [
7–
9]. Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) mi-croarrays have even higher resolution of CNAs in pediatric leukemia. Mullighan et al. [
10] reported multiple deletions, amplifications, point mutations, and structural rearrangements in genes regulating B lymphocyte development and differentiation in 40% of B-precursor ALL, and two other studies [
11,
12] also reported successful use of SNP arrays to characterize recurring CNAs in childhood ALL. All three of these SNP array studies identified the well-described loss of 9p21.3, encompassing
CDKN2A and
CDKN2B, genes that are known to be frequently deleted in ALL. The
CDKN2A gene encodes two distinct proteins, p16
INK4a and p14
ARF which are involved in cell cycle regulation. This region is more frequently deleted in precursor T-cell than precursor B-cell ALL [
13], with variable prognostic significance [
14–
16].
To survey CNAs in childhood leukemia at the resolution of individual gene sequences, we applied a novel genomic technology (molecular inversion probes, or MIPs) that has been adapted for gene copy analysis in cancer [
17,
18]. In this technology, the probe is a single oligonucleotide that recognizes and hybridizes to a specific genomic target sequence with two recognition sites [
19]. After the probe hybridizes to the target DNA, a single base-pair gap exists in the middle of the two recognition sequences. This gap can be either a SNP or a nonpolymorphic nucleotide. The reaction is split into four tubes, with each tube containing polymerase, ligase, and a single nucleotide. In the presence of the appropriate nucleotide and with specific annealing to the target sequence, a circularization event occurs, making the probe amplifiable in subsequent steps. The amplified probes are ultimately detected and quantitated on microarrays that have barcode sequences complementary to those in the individual MIP probes. Because a barcode intermediate is used instead of direct genomic DNA hybridization to an array, it is possible to query any unique sequence without the hybridization constraints of array comparative genomic hybridization or oligonucleotide arrays. Thus far, MIPs have been validated and used for CNA detection in breast [
18], ovarian [
20,
21], and colorectal cancer [
22].
Here, we report on use of MIPs to detect novel areas of gene CNAs and allelic imbalance in childhood leukemia. For this analysis, we used a MIP cancer panel with a resolution of specific gene sequences for > 1,000 cancer genes. We identified a number of novel deletions and amplifications of specific genes, including unique patterns of loss of heterozygosity in precursor B-cell ALL, compared with precursor T-cell ALL. This pilot study demonstrates the feasibility of using MIP technology to analyze childhood leukemia specimens.