Abstract

A longitudinal study of 40 New Zealand Black (NZB) mice and 20 BALB/c control animals was performed. A significant association was observed between the presence of acquired spleen-cell aneuploidy at some time during life and development of histological evidence of reticulum-cell neoplasia in individual animals. This finding is compatible with the hypothesis that aneuploid clones which arise in the spleens of aging NZBs are at least potentially neoplastic. However, no relationship between histologically neoplastic reticulum cell proliferation and aneuploidy was apparent in single splenic specimens obtained from NZB mice of various ages. This lack of association indicates that failure to detect chromosomal abnormalities on direct study of cells from a tumor cannot be taken as evidence that the neoplastic cells themselves lack such abnormalities.

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