| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
Short Communications |



From the Department of Pathology,*
Queen Elizabeth
Hospital, and the Department of Medicine,
Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong, China
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
(but not surface CD3 or the T-cell receptor), and
CD56. The T cell receptor gene is in germline configuration, and there
is an almost invariable association with monoclonal Epstein-Barr virus
infection in the tumor cells.7,8 Clinically, NK cell lymphomas can be classified into several categories depending on the initial sites of involvement.3,4 In the majority of cases, the tumors initially involve the nasal and upper aerodigestive areas, presenting usually as nonhealing necrotic ulcers. These are referred to as nasal NK cell lymphoma. A minority involve primarily nonnasal areas, such as the liver, spleen, gastrointestinal tract, skin, testis, and muscle, and are referred to as nonnasal (nasal-type) NK cell lymphoma. Rarely, the lymphoma can be widely disseminated with a leukemic phase, in which case it is known as NK cell lymphoma/leukemia. These tumors are very rare diseases but show an interesting geographic predilection. They are reported mostly from Asia, Mexico, and South America, but are extremely rare in Western countries.9
NK cell lymphomas have distinct clinicopathological features. However, very little is known of their cytogenetic and molecular changes. Therefore, there is a pressing need for data on genetic alterations in NK cell lymphomas, to understand the underlying pathogenetic mechanisms. Reported karyotypic data from our group and other groups10,11 showed chromosomal deletions at 6q and 13q; and we have shown by comparative genomic hybridization lately that deletions of 11q and 17p also occurred at a high frequency.12 However, small deletions and the exact localization of the deletions are below the limits of resolution of karyotyping and comparative genomic hybridization.
In this study of a large series of NK cell malignancies, we aimed at investigating the frequency of genetic deletions at chromosomes 6q, 11q, 13q, and 17p, as well as defining the specific loci of deletion. The findings were further correlated with the clinical subtypes of these malignancies.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
All 18 cases were ethnic Chinese and were CD2-positive (+ve),
surface CD3-negative/cytoplasmic CD3
+ve, and CD56 +ve NK cell
lymphoma. They included 11 cases of nasal NK cell lymphoma, four cases
of nonnasal NK cell lymphoma, and three cases of NK cell
lymphoma/leukemia. Among the 11 cases of nasal NK cell lymphomas, five
cases were studied at relapse. Clinicopathological features of these
cases are listed in Table 1
. Results of
comparative genomic hybridization in seven cases (cases 1, 3, 8, 9, and
16 to 18) had been previously reported.12
|
DNA Extraction
High molecular weight DNA was extracted from fresh tissue/blood samples with standard phenol-chloroform protocols. For archival samples, serial 5-µm sections were obtained. DNA was extracted with the QIAamp DNA mini kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) according to the manufacturers instructions. All DNA was quantified with the DynaQuant 200 fluorometer (Hoefer, Pharmacia Biotech, Stockholm, Sweden).
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
A total number of 41 fluorochrome (6-Fam, HEX, or NED)-labeled PCR
primer pairs that amplified highly informative dinucleotide repeat
microsatellite loci located on chromosomes 6q, 11q, 13q ,and 17p were
obtained from the ABI Prism Linkage Mapping Set Version 2, which
defined an approximately 10 cM resolution human index map (PE
Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Cytogenetic location of the markers
was obtained from the Genome Data Base (http://gdbwww.gdb.org/) and
from the genetic location database
(ftp://cedar.genetics.soton.ac.uk/publichtml).13
The
designation and cytogenetic location of the markers are shown in Figure 1
.
|
LOH Analysis
PCR products were appropriately diluted and pooled. Pooled PCR product (1.5 µl) was mixed with a loading buffer containing deionized formamide, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid-dextran, and ROX-labeled internal lane standard, denatured at 90°C for 10 minutes, snap-cooled on ice, and electrophoresed in a 5.3% denaturing Longranger sequencing gel (FMC Bioproducts, Rockland, ME) containing 6 mol/L urea in an automated DNA analyzer (ABI Prism 377, PE Biosystems) at a constant voltage of 3,000 V for 2.5 hours. Data were collected automatically with the ABI Prism 377 Collection version 2.5.1 and analyzed by the GeneScan software version 2.1.1 (PE Biosystems). Control DNA, CEPH 1347-02 (PE Biosystems), was amplified and analyzed to confirm that sufficient amplification and accurate sizing of alleles could be obtained in all microsatellite loci.
Calculation of LOH was based on the following
formula:14
![]() |
where a was the area, t was the tumor sample, n was the normal
sample, 1 and 2 were the smaller and larger alleles, respectively.
Values of L < 0.60 or
1.70 indicated that one of the alleles
has decreased more than 40%, resulting in LOH. There was loss of the
larger allele if L < 0.60 and the smaller allele when L
1.70. Cases in which either the PCR gave no signal or the allele peak
height was <100 fluorescence units were designated as failed PCR.
FISH
FISH was performed on slides containing tumor cells fixed in Carnoys medium. Locus-specific probes for chromosome 6q were not commercially available. Probes specific for the loci 11q13, 13q14, 17p13.1, and Tel 17p (Vysis, Naperville, IL) were used according to the manufacturers protocols. For each slide, 200 cells were analyzed. The test loci were considered deleted when the percentage of cells with one hybridization signal was significantly (at least two times) more than the control from normal donors included in each experiment.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
Analysis of informative loci showed LOH in 12 of 15 cases (80%), of which 10 occurred in 11 cases of nasal NK cell lymphomas (91%), and two occurred in four cases of nonnasal NK cell lymphomas (50%). LOH occurred in 57% of cases at 6q13-q14 (D6S434; four of seven cases), 31% at 6q21-q23 (D6S287, D6S262, D6S292; four of 13 cases), 50% at 6q24.3 (D6S441; seven of 14 cases), 67% at 6q25.3 (D6S1581; six of nine cases), and 45.5% at 6q27 (D6S281; five of 11 cases). LOH was not detected with marker D6S446, mapping to 6q27.
LOH at Chromosome 11q
LOH was detected in four of 14 (29%) cases. All four cases were nasal NK cell lymphomas. LOH was found in 10% of cases at 11q13.5-q14 (D11S937; one of 10 cases), and 31% at 11q21-q24 (D11S4175, D11S898, D11S908, D11S925, D11S1320; four of 13 cases).
LOH at Chromosome 13q
LOH was found in 10 of 15 cases (67%), of which seven occurred in 11 cases of nasal NK cell lymphomas (64%), and three occurred in four cases of nonnasal NK cell lymphomas (75%). LOH was found in 60% of cases at 13q12-q14 (D13S217, D13S171, D13S218, D13S263, D13S153; nine of 15 cases), 53% at 13q14 (D13S263, D13S153; eight of 15 cases), 14% at 13q21-q22 (D13S156; one of 7 cases), and 53% at 13q31-q34 (D13S170, D13S265, D13S159, D13S158, D13S173, D13S1265, D13S285; eight of 15 cases).
LOH at Chromosome 17p
LOH was found in four of 13 cases (31%). All four cases were nasal NK cell lymphomas. LOH was found in 36% at 17p13 (D17S849, D17S938, D17S1852; four of 11 cases) and 40% at 17p12 (D17S799; two of five). Case 9 had LOH at all of the three informative loci (D17S849, D17S938, D17S1852) mapping to region 17p13.1-p13.3.
FISH
Limited material was available for FISH analysis, so that it was performed on selected cases and regions only (11q13 in case 17; 13q14 in cases 8b, 16, and 17; and 17p in cases 16 to 18). 11q13 was deleted in case 17 (10% of cells with one signal versus 1.5% in control). 13q14 was deleted in cases 8b, 16, and 17 (16.5%, 49.5%, and 19.5% of cells with one signal versus 6.5% in control). 17p13.1 was deleted in case 16 (23% of cells with one signal versus 8.5% in control), but not in cases 17 and 18. However, FISH with a Tel 17p in case 18 showed a significant number of cells with one signal (42% versus 8.5% in control). In this case, DNA loss possibly involved a region distal to p13.1.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
We have used PCR amplification of high-resolution polymorphic microsatellite markers with fluorochrome-labeled primers and automated DNA fragment analysis to map the loci of allelic loss. The four chromosomal regions were selected for several reasons. Although studied in small number of tumors, these regions have been consistently observed to be involved. Practically, biopsies of NK cell lymphomas are usually small, particularly from nasal areas. Often the amount of material left for investigations after completion of pathological diagnosis is scanty. A genome-wide search for allelic loss that requires large amounts of tumor materials is therefore not feasible.
In this study, LOH in chromosomes 6q, 13q, 17p, and 11q, occurring with
overall frequencies of 80%, 70.6%, 37.5%, and 33.3%, respectively,
showed heterogeneity in NK tumor subtypes (Table 2)
. An examination of
the patterns of aberrations showed that the heterogeneity might be
related to the type as well as the stage of the tumor.
In nasal NK cell lymphomas, deletions of chromosome 6q were found in 10 of 11 cases (the only negative case, case 1, also did not show LOH at any other chromosomal loci tested, raising the possibility that there might be too many contaminating normal cells masking genetic loss in tumor cells). Deletions at D6S434, D6S441, and D6S1581 together identified all but one case (case 6) of NK cell lymphomas. D6S441 and D6S1581 map commonly to 6q246q25. Each was the only marker deleted in two cases (case 4, D6S1581; case 7, D6S441). D6S434 was also the only marker deleted in one other case (case 11). The results implied that these loci might be of primary pathogenetic significance. On the other hand, deletions of chromosome 13q were found only in 33.3% of cases at presentation, but 100% of cases at relapse. This implied that 13q loss might be a progression event in nasal NK cell lymphoma. Deletions at 17p and 11q were less frequent, occurring in 44.4% and 40% of cases, respectively.
In nonnasal NK cell lymphomas, deletions of chromosomes 13q and 6q were frequent events, occurring at 75 and 50% of cases, respectively. Interestingly, deletions of chromosome 11q and 17p were not found in any of these cases, implying that they might not be of primary pathogenetic significance in this group of tumors.
In aggressive NK cell lymphoma/leukemia, FISH analysis was performed in three cases. Deletion of 13q14 (covering the Rb gene) occurred in two of two cases, a frequency comparable to those of nasal and nonnasal NK cell lymphomas. However, deletion at 17p13.1 occurred in two of three cases, which seemed to be higher than that of 30% in nasal and nonnasal lymphomas. Whether deletion at 17p is more prevalent in NK cell lymphoma/leukemia or related to the aggressive nature of the lymphoma will have to be validated by future studies.
The heterogeneity of the location and frequencies of LOH at different chromosomal regions might also be of biological implications. In case 8, tumors at two locations were analyzed. This patient had a primary nasal NK cell lymphoma that relapsed locally and then metastasized. Analysis of the nasal lymphoma showed LOH at only one locus (D6S434), but the metastatic lymphoma in the marrow showed LOH at the same and other additional loci on 6q, which was consistent with clonal evolution. In case 9 where almost all loci on chromosome 13q were deleted, the LOH value ranged from 0.10 at D13S156 to 2.04 at D13S265, indicating that there might be subclones within the tumor with different percentage of cells showing deletions at any given locus.
When examined as a group, some interesting findings are observed. There were five cases with LOH at only one chromosomal region (6q in three cases; 13q in two cases). As illustrated in case 8, the lymphoma at the nasal site showed LOH only at one locus in 6q, whereas the metastatic marrow lesion showed LOH at multiple loci at 6q, 11q, and 13q, implying that these additional deletions were secondary changes. As such, LOH at 13q was found as the sole abnormality in only nonnasal NK cell lymphomas (cases 12 and 14). More cases of nonnasal NK cell lymphomas therefore will have to be investigated to define if LOH at 13q may also be an important primary aberration.
LOH at these chromosomal regions suggested that potential tumor suppressor genes might be involved. Chromosome 6q is frequently deleted in lymphoid malignancies. Several commonly deleted regions involving 6q21, 6q23, and 6q25-q27,17 6q23-q24,18 6q15-q21,19 6q2120 have been reported. Alteration of the c-myb proto-oncogene (mapping to 6q22-q23) expression has been described in cases with deletion in chromosome 6q,21 and more recently a candidate tumor suppressor gene, hZAC, has also been mapped to 6q24-q25.22 Moreover, breaks at 6q21-q25 were associated with a decreased probability of achieving remission in other types of lymphomas.23 Thus, in addition to a pathogenetic role, LOH at 6q might also be associated with the highly malignant nature of NK cell lymphomas. At chromosome 13q, in addition to the retinoblastoma (Rb) gene,24 other tumor suppressor genes have also been proposed to be present.25,26 At chromosome 11q, the commonly deleted region was 11q21-q24. A candidate tumor suppressor gene, ATM, has been mapped to 11q22.3-q23.1.27 Moreover, the NCAM gene, coding for the CD56 NK cell marker, is also localized at 11q23.28,29 In chromosome 17p, the commonly deleted region was 17p13. The tumor suppressor gene TP53 is localized to this region.30 Further studies are needed to delineate if any of these genes are involved in the pathogenesis of NK cell malignancies.
In summary, using high-resolution microsatellite markers, we have defined consistent patterns of genetic deletions in NK cell lymphomas. Our findings suggest specific deletion patterns to be associated with different subtypes of the lymphoma, and the occurrence of distinct molecular pathways of tumor progression. The high frequency of LOH at chromosome 6q may serve as a molecular marker of NK cell lymphoma, particularly the nasal subtype. Refinement of allelic loss at 6q might lead to the identification of novel tumor suppressor genes involved in the tumorigenesis of NK cell lymphoma. Finally, it will be interesting to examine NK cell lymphomas from different geographic localities to define if similar patterns of genetic lesions are involved.
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Supported by the Kadoorie Charitable Foundation.
Accepted for publication September 13, 2000.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
Y.-C. Huang, C.-M. Lee, M. Chen, M.-Y. Chung, Y.-H. Chang, W. J.-S. Huang, D. M.-T. Ho, C.-C. Pan, T. T. Wu, S. Yang, et al. Haplotypes, Loss of Heterozygosity, and Expression Levels of Glycine N-Methyltransferase in Prostate Cancer Clin. Cancer Res., March 1, 2007; 13(5): 1412 - 1420. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. M. Wong, J. M. F. Lee, T. C. M. Lau, S. T. Fan, and I. O. L. Ng Clinicopathological Significance of Loss of Heterozygosity on Chromosome 13q in Hepatocellular Carcinoma Clin. Cancer Res., July 1, 2002; 8(7): 2266 - 2272. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. L. Ping Siu, J. K. Cheung Chan, K.-F. Wong, and Y.-L. Kwong Specific Patterns of Gene Methylation in Natural Killer Cell Lymphomas : p73 Is Consistently Involved Am. J. Pathol., January 1, 2002; 160(1): 59 - 66. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. Quintanilla-Martinez, M. Kremer, G. Keller, M. Nathrath, A. Gamboa-Dominguez, A. Meneses, L. Luna-Contreras, A. Cabras, H. Hoefler, A. Mohar, et al. p53 Mutations in Nasal Natural Killer/T-Cell Lymphoma from Mexico : Association with Large Cell Morphology and Advanced Disease Am. J. Pathol., December 1, 2001; 159(6): 2095 - 2105. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |