Abstract

Reactivation of telomerase, an enzyme which elongates human telomeres, is associated with cell immortilization. In approximately 90% of malignant tumours telomerase activity can be demonstrated, whereas in benign tumours it is mostly absent. Chondrosarcomas are relatively rare malignant cartilaginous neoplasms. A small number of chondrosarcomas located centrally in bone arise secondarily to an enchondroma, while the majority of chondrosarcomas developing from the surface arise within the cartilage cap of an osteochondroma. The histological distinction between a benign lesion and low-grade chondrosarcoma is generally considered difficult. To investigate whether the progression towards chondrosarcoma is characterized by reactivation of telomerase activity, this study determined telomerase activity in ten enchondromas, five osteochondromas, and 37 chondrosarcomas using the TRAP assay. In all tumour samples except one, telomerase activity was absent. By adding tumour lysates to the positive control, an increasing inhibition of telomerase activity was found with an increasing chondroid matrix, suggesting that it may contain inhibitory factors. Inhibition due to endogenous RNAse or Taq-polymerase inhibitors was excluded. The lack of detectable telomerase activity in the high-grade component of a dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma without matrix favours the possibility that telomerase is truly absent. Either its true absence or inhibitory effects disabling telomerase detection exclude the telomerase TRAP assay as a diagnostic tool in the differential diagnosis of benign and low-grade malignant cartilaginous tumours.

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