“…Previous research demonstrating isochromosome 12p in both GCTs and HMs suggested that these malignancies had a common progenitor, and the identification of the same gene mutations, including of TP53 and PTEN, in both mGCTs and AML samples in two cases established the idea that the mGCT and AML share a founding clone [6,9,10]. In the present case, the common cytogenetic Two cases harboring concurrent mutations of TP53 and PTEN in both mGCTs and AMKL have been reported [9,10], and our case is the third. As for the TP53 mutation, a nonsynonymous mutation (exon2:c.389T>C:p.L130P) and a frameshift mutation (exon10:c.7578213A>del:p.R213fs_del) in the DNA binding domain was reported in each case, which both lead to the loss of its transcription activity [9,10,12,13].…”