Abstract
Nickel ions produce selective damage in heterochromatic regions of chromosomes. Male Chinese hamster embryo cells, which have heterochromatin along the entire long arm of the X-chromosome, exhibit an unusually high incidence of nickel-induced transformation compared with female cells of the same species. However, 3-methylcholanthrene, a carcinogen that produces a random distribution of chromosome damage, transforms female and male cells equally. Other species that do not have as much heterochromatin on the X-chromosome exhibit similar incidences of nickel-induced tumors in males and females. Four out of five of the male nickel-transformed Chinese hamster cell lines exhibit a deletion of the heterochromatic long arm of the X-chromosome as the only common karyotypic aberration. This result indicates that a deletion of a heterochromatic chromosomal region may be an important feature of the nickel-induced carcinogenic process. All of the male nickel transformed cells lines are able to form tumors in athymic nude mice.
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