Literature DB >> 9389787

Interphase cytogenetics of prostatic tumor progression: specific chromosomal abnormalities are involved in metastasis to the bone.

J C Alers1, P J Krijtenburg, C Rosenberg, W C Hop, A M Verkerk, F H Schröder, T H van der Kwast, F T Bosman, H van Dekken.   

Abstract

Only limited data are available on chromosomes specifically involved in the multistep tumorigenesis of prostate cancer. To investigate the cytogenetic status at different stages of prostatic tumor development, we have applied interphase in situ hybridization (ISH) with a set of (peri) centromeric DNA probes--specific for chromosomes 1, 7, 8, and Y--to routinely processed tissue sections of prostatic specimens from 75 different individuals. Our panel consisted of: 16 normal/benign prostatic hyperplasia specimens; 23 primary, localized, prostatic tumors (N0M0 stage); 20 regional lymph node metastases (M0 stage); and 16 distant metastases. Numerical aberrations of at least one chromosome were not observed in normal/benign prostatic hyperplasia cases, but were present in localized tumors (39%), regional lymph node metastases (40%), and distant metastases (69%). Within the different pTNM groups, we observed the following aberrations (listed, within each series, in decreasing order of frequency): -Y, +8, -8, +7 in primary tumors; +8, +7, -Y, +Y, -8 in regional lymph node metastases; and +8, +7, +1, -Y, -8 in distant metastases. In primary tumors, the number of aberrant cases increased significantly with local tumor stage (p < 0.05). A significant increase in gain of chromosome 8 was also observed (p < 0.02). Gain of chromosome 7 and/or 8 showed a significant increase with progression of local tumor stage (p < 0.02). Specific involvement of chromosome 8 was seen in bone metastases, but not in hematogenous metastases to other sites (p = 0.02). Comparative genomic hybridization analysis of these bone metastases disclosed centromere 8 gains as amplifications of the (whole) 8q arm, whereas centromeric loss appeared to be due to loss of 8p sequences. With progression toward metastatic disease, an accumulation of genetic changes was seen as exemplified by gain of chromosome 1, which was solely observed in distant metastases. With tumor progression, gain of chromosomes 7 and/or 8 significantly increased (p = 0.03), whereas the number of cases with aberrations of the Y chromosome did not change. Furthermore, ploidy status determined by ISH revealed a significant increase in the number of aneuploid cases along with advancement of pTNM stage (p = 0.04). Collectively, the data strongly suggest that: (a) gain of chromosome 7 and/or 8 sequences is implicated in prostatic tumor progression; (b) gain of chromosome 8 sequences is related to local tumor growth; (c) overrepresentation of 8q sequences, most likely by isochromosome 8q formation, is involved in metastatic spread to the bone; and (d) changes in the centromeric copy number, as detected by interphase ISH, might in some cases represent structural alterations, such as an isochromosome.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9389787

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Invest        ISSN: 0023-6837            Impact factor:   5.662


  6 in total

1.  Molecular cytogenetic analysis of prostatic adenocarcinomas from screening studies : early cancers may contain aggressive genetic features.

Authors:  J C Alers; P J Krijtenburg; A N Vis; R F Hoedemaeker; M F Wildhagen; W C Hop; T T van Der Kwast; F H Schröder; H J Tanke; H van Dekken
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2001-02       Impact factor: 4.307

2.  High-resolution analysis of paraffin-embedded and formalin-fixed prostate tumors using comparative genomic hybridization to genomic microarrays.

Authors:  Pamela L Paris; Donna G Albertson; Janneke C Alers; Armann Andaya; Peter Carroll; Jane Fridlyand; Ajay N Jain; Sherwin Kamkar; David Kowbel; Pieter-Jaap Krijtenburg; Daniel Pinkel; Fritz H Schröder; Kees J Vissers; Vivienne J E Watson; Mark F Wildhagen; Colin Collins; Herman Van Dekken
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 4.307

3.  Correlation between Liver Metastases and the Level of PRL-3 mRNA Expression in Patients with Primary Colorectal Cancer.

Authors:  Nam Won Kim; Chong Woo Chu; Tae Sung Ahn; Chang Jin Kim; Dong Jun Jung; Myoung Won Son; Sang Ho Bae; Moon Soo Lee; Chang Ho Kim; Moo Jun Baek
Journal:  J Korean Soc Coloproctol       Date:  2011-10-31

4.  DNA fragmentation simulation method (FSM) and fragment size matching improve aCGH performance of FFPE tissues.

Authors:  Justin M Craig; Natalie Vena; Shakti Ramkissoon; Ahmed Idbaih; Shaun D Fouse; Memet Ozek; Aydin Sav; D Ashley Hill; Linda R Margraf; Charles G Eberhart; Mark W Kieran; Andrew D Norden; Patrick Y Wen; Massimo Loda; Sandro Santagata; Keith L Ligon; Azra H Ligon
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-06-15       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Chromosomal alterations in the clonal evolution to the metastatic stage of squamous cell carcinomas of the lung.

Authors:  S Petersen; M Aninat-Meyer; K Schlüns; K Gellert; M Dietel; I Petersen
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 7.640

Review 6.  Genetic alterations in prostate cancer.

Authors:  Jonathan L Chin; Robert E Reiter
Journal:  Curr Urol Rep       Date:  2004-06       Impact factor: 2.862

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.