Abstract

Loss of heterozygosity in two in vitro-immortalized human oral keratinocyte cell lines was analysed by polymerase chain reaction using 42 polymorphic microsatellite markers on chromosomes 4, 6, 7 and 15. These chromosomes are regarded as candidates for harbouring genes involved in the immortalization of human cells or tumour-suppressor genes in several tumours, including oral cancers, and karyotypic analysis has revealed that both cell lines have non-random alterations in these chromosomes. No allele losses were detected at any informative loci on chromosomes 4 and 6 in the cell lines, including genomic regions adjacent to putative human tumour-suppressor genes and putative senescence genes. When analysed for loss of heterozygosity on chromosomes 7 and 15, allele losses common to both cell lines were detected in the regions at 7q11.2, 7q21.1–21.3 and 7q31.1. High frequencies of loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 7q in at least two distinct regions, particularly centred around 7q31, are observed in a variety of tumours, including oral squamous-cell carcinoma, suggesting that multiple genes involved in immortalization of these cell lines might be present on chromosome 7q.

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