Abstract

Clonal lines of transformed rat liver epithelial cells, derived from a single population of cloned diploid rat liver epithelial (stem-like) cell line (WB-F344) by exposure in vitro to N-methyl-N'-nitro-N- nitrosoguanidine (MNNG), produce hepatocellular carcinomas, hepatoblastomas and adenocarcinomas in syngeneic rats (Tsao and Grisham, Am. J. Pathol., 127, 168-181, 1987). In this study we show that these clonal lines demonstrate near-diploid (GN clones) or near-triploid (GP clones) aneuploidy and the universal occurrence of non-random chromosomal abnormalities. Marker chromosomes that involved four autosomes--a non-reciprocal translocation involving chromosomes 1 and 7 (t1q43;7q34), and addition of DNA of unknown origin to the pericentromeric regions of chromosomes 4 and 10--occurred in all of the cells of all transformed clones and in the cells of tumors that grew from them. New marker chromosomes involving the same regions of chromosomes 4 and 7 were found in several cell lines established from independent tumors. The preservation of marker chromosomes in tumor cells in the face of random loss and gain of other chromosomes suggests that these non-random aberrations were necessary for tumor formation. The presence of marker chromosomes was associated with increased expression of the c-myc gene (located at q34 on chromosome 7), the c-H-ras gene (located at q41-43 on chromosome 1) and the c-K-ras and TGF alpha genes (both located at unknown sites on chromosome 4), which we have previously shown to be highly correlated with tumorigenicity in these same transformed clonal lines (Lee et al., Cancer Res., 51, 5238-5244, 1992).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call