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No evidence of replication error phenotype in primary gastric lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue

โœ Scribed by Wei Sheng Xu; Alexander C. L. Chan; Raymond Liang; Gopesh Srivastava


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
French
Weight
72 KB
Volume
76
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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โœฆ Synopsis


Replication error (RER) phenotype, caused by deficiency of DNA mismatch repair genes and revealed by widespread microsatellite instability, has been detected in subsets of a wide variety of solid tumors, but rarely in lymphomas in general. So far, the involvement of RER phenotype in the pathogenesis of gastric lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) type has not been conclusively established. We therefore examined 9 microsatellite loci on 5 chromosomes [D2S123, D3S11, D3S1261, D3S1262, D3S1265, D6S262, D18S59, a CTTT(T) repeat in intron 20 of RB1 gene and a CA repeat in p53 locus] in 33 cases of primary gastric MALT lymphoma for evidence of microsatellite instability by polymerase chain reaction using primers end-labeled with [โฅ-33 P] ATP. Although novel-length allele was observed in 7 of 33 cases (21.2%), none of these 7 cases showed changes in more than one locus. RER phenotype was scored as positive in a case when more than 1 of the 9 examined microsatellite loci showed length alterations. Accordingly, none of the 33 cases had a RER phenotype. This result suggests that the pathogenesis of gastric MALT lymphoma does not involve RER phenotype. It is consistent with the general observations in lymphomas, but is highly in contrast to a previous report showing more than 50% of MALT lymphomas with the RER phenotype.


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## Background: The concept of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (malt) lymphoma is now widely accepted. however, precise characterization of the features of malt lesions in the stomach is needed. for this, extensive analysis of resected gastrectomy specimens from a large number of patients with mal