Geographic distribution of co‐dominant DNA stemlines in breast carcinoma
- 1 September 1995
- Vol. 21 (1) , 14-17
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cyto.990210105
Abstract
Breast carcinomas often contain multiple DNA stemlines in flow cytometric DNA histograms. However, due to mixing during tissue disaggregation the microanatomical relationship between the cells which comprise distinct stemlines is unclear. We performed image cytophotometric DNA analysis (IA) on two separate areas of intact tissue sections of 19 breast carcinomas which were selected on the basis of flow cytometric (FCM) DNA content heterogeneity (i.e., multiple stemlines). For comparison, similar analyses were performed on seven tumors with unimodal FCM DNA histograms. Six of the 7 tumors (86%) with unimodal FCM histograms were also unimodal in both IA DNA histograms. Among tumor with heterogeneous FCM DNA histograms, the presence of multiple stemlines was confirmed in IA DNA histograms in 16/19. In nine of these 16 cases, multiple DNA stemlines having similar DNA indices were present in both areas of neoplasm examined with IA. The remaining seven cases displayed unimodal IA histograms in both areas, however DNA indices differed between the two histograms. These findings imply that cell populations corresponding to flow cytometrically detected DNA stemlines are often intimately admixed, even within geographically separated portions of breast tumors. This pattern suggests that productive interactions between genetically distinct tumor populations may lead to stable co‐dominance of ancestral clones during progression of some breast carcinomas.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Progression of signet ring cell carcinomas in the human stomachCancer, 1993
- High levels of DNA index heterogeneity in advanced breast carcinomas. Evidence for DNA ploidy differences between lymphatic and hematogenous metastasesCancer, 1993
- Dna ploidy status and DNA content instability within single tumors in renal cell carcinomaCytometry, 1993
- Pathological and biological relevance of cytophotometric DNA content to breast carcinoma genetic progressionJournal of Cellular Biochemistry, 1993
- Ploidy in invasive colorectal cancer. Implications for metastatic diseaseCancer, 1991
- DNA content and genetic evolution of human colorectal adenocarcinoma. A study by flow cytometry and cytogenetic analysisInternational Journal of Cancer, 1988
- The influence of age on the DNA ploidy levels of breast tumoursEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1983