Journal
LABORATORY INVESTIGATION
Volume 83, Issue 10, Pages 1509-1516Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1097/01.LAB.0000090157.13040.58
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To define genetic aberrations playing a role in the development of enteropathy-type T-cell lymphoma (ETL), we examined 26 such tumors using a battery of 47 microsatellite markers. The most frequent aberration (seen in 40% of informative genotypes) was amplification of genomic material in region 9q34 encompassing c-abl and Notch-1 gene loci. Other frequent amplifications were detected in regions 5q33.3-34 and 7q31 (both in more than 30%). Multiple losses of heterozygosity were detected in 6p24, 7p21, 17q23-25, regions containing putative tumor suppressor genes, and in the p53 locus in 17p13.1. Analysis of the pattern of occurrence of these aberrations revealed existence of two ETL subgroups: one of them characterized by the 9q34 aberration and another smaller one showing allelic imbalances in 3q27. These two aberrations were mutually exclusive. Microsatellite instability (MSI) was detected in 69% of the examined lymphomas; the percentage of MSI-positive genotypes per tumor ranged from 2% to 12%. The spectrum of genetic alterations detected showed patterns dependent on morphology. Monomorpic ETLs displayed frequently biallelic TCR-gamma gene rearrangement (p = 0078, chi(2) test). They showed a different pattern and fewer allelic imbalances (no 3q27, 4q28, 13q14, fewer 5q21, or 5q33.3-34 aberrations) and a lower frequency of MSI than pleomorphic ETLs.
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