Artigo
Investigation of chromosome 21 aneuploidies in breast fibroadenomas by fluorescence in situ hybridisation
Fecha
2006-12-01Registro en:
Clinical and Experimental Medicine. New York: Springer, v. 6, n. 4, p. 166-170, 2006.
1591-8890
10.1007/s10238-006-0112-9
WOS:000243226700004
Autor
Leite, D. Soares
Lima, P. D. Lima de
Leal, M. Ferreira
Chen, E. Suchi
Casartelli, C.
Cardoso Smith, M. de Arruda
Burbano, R. Rodriguez
Institución
Resumen
Fibroadenoma (FA) is a benign breast tumour that occurs in about 25% of women. Cytogenetic studies suggest that numerical chromosomal aberrations may contribute to tumorigenesis, but chromosomal instability is still poorly characterised in breast cancer. the aim of this study was to investigate numerical alterations of chromosome 21 in 15 breast FAs. All samples were analysed by classical cytogenetics and by fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) for chromosome 21 DNA sequences. Classical cytogenetics analysis showed that all cells were diploidies with modal number varying between 43 and 47 chromosomes, and clonal chromosome alterations in 46.7% of tumours. Clonal numerical alterations involved, preferentially, chromosomes 8, 10, 12, 16 and 21. FISH analysis showed a statistically significant difference for chromosome 21 monosomy between seven samples and control group. This monosomy varied from 24.5% to 43.5% of analysed cells. the presence of chromosomal alterations in FAs may be a consequence of the proliferation process and is probably not related to the aetiology of this type of lesion. the study of benign proliferations and comparison with chromosome alterations in their malignant counterparts should result in an understanding of the genes acting in cell proliferation alone and those that cause these cells to both undergo malignant transformation and become invasive.