Abstract
A transforming N-ras gene was cloned from acute myeloblastic leukemia bone marrow cells, in parallel with the N-ras gene derived from fibroblasts of the same patient. N-ras derived from fibroblasts lacked focus-forming activity in NIH/3T3 cells, indicating that gene activation in the leukemia cells must have occurred by a somatic event. Construction of chimeric molecules between the transforming and the normal N-ras genes and subsequent biological and sequence analysis of these constructs revealed that the transforming gene was altered by a point mutation changing amino acid 12 of the N-ras protein from glycine to aspartic acid.