Karyotypic characterization of colorectal adenocarcinomas
- 1 February 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer
- Vol. 12 (2) , 97-109
- https://doi.org/10.1002/gcc.2870120204
Abstract
Cytogenetic analysis of short‐term cultures from 52 primary colorectal adenocarcinomas revealed clonal chromosome aberrations in 45 tumors, whereas the remaining 7 had a normal karyotype. More than 1 abnormal clone was detected in 26 tumors; in 18 of them, the clones were cytogenetically unrelated. The modal chromosome number was near‐diploid in 32 tumors and near‐triploid to near‐tetraploid in 13. Only numerical aberrations were identified in 13 carcinomas, only structural aberrations in 3, and 29 had both numerical and structural changes. The most common numerical abnormalities were, in order of decreasing frequency, gains of chromosomes 7, 13, 20, and Y and losses of chromosomes 18, Y, 14, and 15. The structural changes most often affected chromosomes 1, 17, 8, 7, and 13. The most frequently rearranged chromosome bands were, in order of decreasing frequency, 13q10, 17p10, 1p22, 8q10, 17p11, 7q11, 1p33, 7p22, 7q32, 12q24, 16p13, and 19p13. Frequently recurring aberrations affecting these bands were del(1)(p22), i(8)(q10), i(13)(q10), and add(17)(p11–13). The most common partial gains were from chromosome arms 8q, 13q, and 17q and the most common partial losses from chromosome arms 1p, 8p, 13p, and 17p. A correlation analysis between the karyotype and the clinicopathologic features in our total material, which consists of altogether 153 colorectal carcinomas, including 116 with an abnormal karyotype, showed a statistically significant association (P < 0.05) between the karyotype and tumor grade and site. Carcinomas with structural chromosome rearrangements were often poorly differentiated; well and moderately differentiated tumors often had only numerical aberrations or normal karyotypes. Abnormal karyotypes were more common in rectal carcinomas than in carcinomas situated higher up. Near‐triploid to near‐tetraploid karyotypes were more than twice as frequent in tumors of the distal colon as in those of the proximal colon and rectum. The cytogenetic data indicate that carcinomas located in the proximal colon and rectum, which often are near‐diploid with simple numerical changes and cytogenetically unrelated clones, probably arise through different mechanisms than do tumors located in the distal colon, which more often have complex near‐triploid to near‐tetraploid karyotypes.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Karyotypic pattern of pancreatic adenocarcinomas correlates with survival and tumour gradeInternational Journal of Cancer, 1994
- Clues to the Pathogenesis of Familial Colorectal CancerScience, 1993
- Concordant p53 and DCC alterations and allelic losses on chromosomes 13q and 14q associated with liver metastases of colorectal carcinomaInternational Journal of Cancer, 1993
- Deletions in the short arm of chromosome 8 are present in up to 90% of human colorectal cancer cell linesGenes, Chromosomes and Cancer, 1992
- A single human colonic adenoma cell line can be converted IN VITRO to both A colorectal adenocarcinoma and A mucinous carcinomaInternational Journal of Cancer, 1992
- Trisomy 7 in Short‐Term Cultures of Colorectal AdenocarcinomasGenes, Chromosomes and Cancer, 1991
- Cytogenetics of colorectal adenocarcinomasCancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, 1990
- Cytogenetics and DNA amplification in colorectal cancersGenes, Chromosomes and Cancer, 1990
- Human large‐bowel cancer: Correlation of clinical and histopathological features with banded chromosomesInternational Journal of Cancer, 1982
- Chromosomal banding patterns in human large bowel cancerInternational Journal of Cancer, 1981