Abstract

Tumors were induced in experimental animals in order to investigate early tumor growth with conventional histology and gliofibrillary acid protein (GFAP) demonstration with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) method. In one experiment, the animals were killed after transplacental ENU administration, when microtumors were suspected; in the second experiment, the animals were followed up to their natural death and microtumors found at random were used for analysis. Conventional histology revealed 3 types of microtumors: growth restricted to the subventricular matrix, growth in the neighbourhood of the ventricles with obvious or probable connection to the ventricular zones and small tumors observed exclusively in the white matter. The latter tumors by conventional staining were composed of small round cells, considered to be oligodendrocytes. They did not contain GFA-protein positive cells within the tumor. The tumor in presumable and visible connection with the ventricular lining did contain GFAP-positive astrocytes. In the very small subventricular tumors, the small round cells (oligodendrocytes) were in continuous contact with the identical interfascicular glial cells, while GFAP positive astrocytes seemed to stem from the subventricular astrocytes (tanycytes, ependymoglia). The ependyma itself was always preserved. A twofold origin of these experimental tumors with probable development into one common cytological glial type is assumed.

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