Abstract
Rearrangement of the BCL-2 gene is the molecular consequence of the t(14;18) chromosomal translocation, which is found in approximately 60-90% of follicular lymphomas. To investigate the ability of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect this rearrangement in fixed-tissue samples, we studied 48 cases of follicular lymphoma using DNA extracted from paired samples of fresh-frozen tissue and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. A standard phenol-chloroform DNA extraction method was used for both types of tissue. Rearrangements of the major breakpoint region (MBR) and minor cluster sequence (MCS) were examined. Three segments of the human beta-globin gene were also amplified to estimate the degree of DNA degradation in the fixed-tissue samples. PCR of fresh-tissue (intact) DNA revealed amplifiable products in 29 of the 48 follicular lymphomas (60%), whereas the fixed-tissue (degraded) DNA studies were positive in 24 (50%). MBR products were detected in 24 fresh-tissue samples, and varied from 80 bp to > 1.5 kb. Twenty of these cases yielded MBR products in the corresponding fixed-tissue DNA, ranging from 80 to 276 bp. Five fresh-tissue and four fixed-tissue samples produced MCS segments that ranged from 340 bp to 1.2 kb. Four of the five samples with no detectable MBR or MCS translocations using degraded DNA had products greater than 1.0 kb in the fresh-tissue studies. A 175-bp segment of the beta-globin gene was amplified in all 29 fixed-tissue samples; a 324 bp fragment was produced in 20 samples (69%), and a 676 bp segment was detected in 13 (45%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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