Cytogenetic studies on fresh human breast cancers revealed that homogeneously staining regions (HSRs), which are assumed t o represent DNA amplification, are observed in almost half of the cases. To search for a possible relationship between HSRs and proto-oncogene amplification, I 6 proto-oncogenes
Characterization of recurrent homogeneously staining regions in 72 breast carcinomas
✍ Scribed by Jacqueline Bernardino; Françoise Apiou; Michèle Gerbault-Seureau; Bernard Malfoy; Bernard Dutrillaux
- Book ID
- 101261788
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 161 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1045-2257
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Cytogenetic analyses were performed on 223 breast carcinomas, of which 60% contained homogeneously staining regions (hsr), an intrachromosomal cytogenetic feature of gene amplification. The precise hsr localization could be determined for 123 hsr from 72 cases. The juxtacentromeric region of chromosome 8, band 11q13, and the whole of chromosome 17 were frequently involved. For 28 cases, the origin of the DNA sequences forming HSR could be investigated by chromosome painting, comparative genomic hybridization, and/or Southern blotting. Sequences from chromosomes 11 and 17 were mostly found within hsr located on chromosomes 11 and 17, respectively. In contrast, sequences from chromosome 8 were rarely found within hsr localized on chromosome 8. These observations suggest that different mechanisms lead to hsr formation in breast cancer. Band 11q13 and the 17p chromosome arm may correspond to sites of in situ amplification driven by deletions distal to the amplification target genes. hsr in the region 17q2, which is also a frequent site of in situ amplification, takes place without the occurrence of a distal deletion. The short arm of chromosome 8 is often deleted, but frequently becomes the site of hsr formed elsewhere in the genome.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract A modified comparative genomic hybridization (mCGH) technique was applied to a series of 17 primary breast carcinomas in which cytogenetic study (CG) demonstrated the presence of homogeneously staining region(s), suggesting the occurrence of DNA amplification. mCGH demonstrated recurren
A modified comparative genomic hybridization (mCGH) technique was used t o identify and map amplified DNA sequences in six homogeneously staining regions (hsr) from three primary breast carcinomas. Five different chromosomal regions and bands were identified as sites of amplification: 8p I, I7q2 I.
## Abstract The cell line CIPL38 was derived from the pleural effusion of a patient with small cell lung cancer. The karyotype was hyperdiploid and complex with a variable number of marker chromosomes. Two of the markers had large homogeneously staining regions (hsr), which were shown to consist of