Ariyanayagam-Baksh Shashi M, Baksh Fabien K, Swalsky Patricia A, Finkelstein Sydney D
Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Mod Pathol. 2003 Oct;16(10):992-5. doi: 10.1097/01.MP.0000087421.44975.1C.
Melanoma development and progression is thought to be the result of a multi-step accumulation of genetic damage, with loss of heterozygosity in chromosome 9p (MTS1) frequently described. In addition, chromosome 10q allelic loss has been reported, implicating the tumor suppressor gene PTEN/MMAC1 on 10q23.3. The MXI1 gene at 10q24-25 is another candidate tumor suppressor that has only rarely been studied in melanomas, with conflicting results. We used microdissection-based genotyping to investigate 29 melanomas from 20 patients for loss of heterozygosity in intragenic and flanking microsatellite markers for this latter gene. Concurrently, the MTS1 gene was similarly studied using two flanking microsatellites. Fifty-four percent (15 of 28) of the informative cases showed loss of heterozygosity for one or both MXI1 markers, as compared with 67% (16 of 24) of the informative cases for MTS1. MXI1 allelic loss was seen more frequently in recurrent/metastatic tumors (59%), as compared with in primary (33%) lesions. Eighty percent of the primary tumors showed loss of heterozygosity for MTS1, as well as 63% of recurrent/metastatic ones. We studied more than one tumor in eight patients, with those from three patients showing discordant genetic patterns. One patient showed a metastatic tumor with allelic loss for MXI1 that was not identified in the primary melanoma or a local recurrence. The other two patients showed clonal heterogeneity in MXI1 at synchronous and metachronous metastatic foci. These findings support MXI1 as a putative tumor suppressor gene involved in conventional melanoma progression. Genetic heterogeneity seen in different metastases from the same primary suggests a nonlinear pattern of chromosomal damage, with the development of multiple clones within the primary tumor, each acquiring its own metastatic potential.
黑色素瘤的发生和发展被认为是遗传损伤多步骤积累的结果,其中9号染色体p臂(MTS1)杂合性缺失经常被提及。此外,有报道称10号染色体q臂等位基因缺失,这涉及位于10q23.3的肿瘤抑制基因PTEN/MMAC1。位于10q24 - 25的MXI1基因是另一个候选肿瘤抑制基因,在黑色素瘤中很少被研究,且结果相互矛盾。我们使用基于显微切割的基因分型技术,研究了来自20名患者的29例黑色素瘤中该基因的基因内和侧翼微卫星标记的杂合性缺失情况。同时,使用两个侧翼微卫星对MTS1基因进行了类似研究。在有信息的病例中,54%(28例中的15例)显示一个或两个MXI1标记杂合性缺失,而MTS1有信息病例中的这一比例为67%(24例中的16例)。与原发性(33%)病变相比,MXI1等位基因缺失在复发/转移性肿瘤中更常见(59%)。80%的原发性肿瘤以及63%的复发/转移性肿瘤显示MTS1杂合性缺失。我们研究了8名患者的不止一个肿瘤,其中3名患者的肿瘤显示出不一致的遗传模式。一名患者的转移性肿瘤显示MXI1等位基因缺失,而在原发性黑色素瘤或局部复发中未发现。另外两名患者在同步和异时性转移灶的MXI1中显示出克隆异质性。这些发现支持MXI1作为一个参与传统黑色素瘤进展的假定肿瘤抑制基因。同一原发性肿瘤不同转移灶中出现的遗传异质性表明染色体损伤呈非线性模式,原发性肿瘤内会形成多个克隆,每个克隆都有其自身的转移潜能。