Abstract

To document over-expression of protooncogenes in tumors, it is necessary to determine the level of expression in the progenitor normal tissue. These studies compare the levels of nuclear transcription of a series of growth-factor related genes and protooncogenes in human glioblastoma cell lines with those in three normal glial cell populations. The unusual finding was that levels in the three normal glial cell populations varied considerably for several genes and thus overexpression of a specific gene in a tumor cell when compared to just one normal glial cell population would not necessarily represent overexpression. In this study, we compared the level of 17 genes in 7 tumors to the highest level of each gene found in any of three normal glial cell populations. Over-expression of PDGF-B in 4 7 glioblastoma cell lines, EGFR in 1 7 , neu in 1 7 IGF-2 in 1 7 and ros in 2 7 was observed. The variation observed in the normal glial cell populations emphasizes the possibility that the normal glial cell populations represent different glial cell lineages and/or stages of differentiation and that the tumors could have arisen from different normal glial cells. Matching lineages of normal and tumor cells, probably by monoclonal antibody reactions, may be required to accurately define over-expression.

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