(American Journal of Pathology. 2001;159:1941-1948.)
© 2001 American Society for Investigative Pathology
Loss of Heterozygosity on Chromosomes 9q and 16p in Atypical Adenomatous Hyperplasia Concomitant with Adenocarcinoma of the Lung
Kazuya Takamochi*
,
Tsutomu Ogura*,
Kenji Suzuki
,
Hidenori Kawasaki*
,
Yukiko Kurashima*,
Tomoyuki Yokose
,
Atsushi Ochiai
,
Kanji Nagai
,
Yutaka Nishiwaki
and
Hiroyasu Esumi*
From the Divsions of Investigative Treatment*
and
Pathology,
National Cancer Center Research
Institute East, Chiba; the Division of Thoracic
Oncology,
National Cancer Center Hospital
East, Chiba; and the Division of Thoracic
Surgery,
National Cancer Center Hospital,
Tokyo, Japan
 |
Abstract
|
|---|
Atypical adenomatous hyperplasia (AAH) has recently been implicated
as a precursor to lung adenocarcinoma. We previously reported loss of
heterozygosity (LOH) in tuberous sclerosis (TSC) gene-associated
regions to frequently be observed in lung adenocarcinoma with multiple
AAHs. In this study, we analyzed LOH in four microsatellite
loci on 9q, including the TSC1 gene-associated
region, and four loci on 16p, including the
TSC2 gene-associated region, in both 18 AAHs and
17 concomitant lung adenocarcinomas from 11 patients. Seven of 18
(39%) AAHs and 9 of 17 (53%) adenocarcinomas displayed LOH on 9q.
Five (28%) AAHs and seven (41%) adenocarcinomas harbored LOH at loci
adjacent to the TSC1 gene. Four of 18 (22%) AAHs and 6
of 17 (35%) adenocarcinomas displayed LOH on 16p. One (6%) AAH and
five (29%) adenocarcinomas harbored LOH at loci adjacent to the
TSC2 gene. These findings may indicate a causal
relationship of LOH on 9q and 16p in a fraction of AAH lesions and
adenocarcinomas of the lung. Especially, the frequencies of LOH
on 9q and at the TSC1 gene-associated region were high.
The TSC1 gene or another neighboring tumor suppressor
gene on 9q might be involved in an early stage of the pathogenesis of
lung adenocarcinoma.
 |
Introduction
|
|---|
Carcinogenesis is a multistep process that results from an
accumulation of genetic alterations in oncogenes and tumor suppressor
genes. It is reasonable to regard each preneoplastic lesion as possibly
having a characteristic genetic change and it is essential to
investigate the biological features of preneoplastic lesions to
elucidate the pathogenesis of carcinomas. In lung cancers, squamous
dysplasia has long been recognized as a preneoplastic lesion of
squamous cell carcinoma.1,2
However, the etiology of
adenocarcinoma, one of the major histological types of lung cancer, is
not well understood. Several genetic alterations in atypical
adenomatous hyperplasia (AAH), such as K-ras or
p53 mutations or loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on chromosomes
3p, 9p, or 17p, have been reported.3-10
These genetic
abnormalities and other immunohistochemical or morphometric
abnormalities in AAH overlap with those of
adenocarcinomas.11-13
Thus, AAH has been implicated as a
preneoplastic lesion of lung adenocarcinoma, and listed as a precursor
lesion in the World Health Organization 1999 classification of lung
tumors.14
Tuberous sclerosis (TSC) is a
relatively common autosomal-dominant disease that causes mental
retardation, seizures, and multiple hamartomas in many organs including
the brain, eyes, kidney, skin, and heart. Mutations of either the
TSC1 or the TSC2 gene are responsible for this
disease.15,16
The lesion most commonly described in the
lung is lymphangioleiomyomatosis, which occurs in 1% of patients with
TSC and affects only females.17
Multifocal micronodular
pneumocyte hyperplasia (MMPH) has also been described as a rare
pulmonary manifestation of TSC.18
MMPH is so similar to
AAH morphologically that histological distinction between MMPH and AAH
is difficult.19
We previously reported that LOH in the
TSC gene-associated regions was frequently observed in lung
adenocarcinoma with multiple AAHs.20
In this study, we
analyzed microsatellite alterations at several microsatellite loci
including the TSC gene-associated regions in both AAH
lesions and concomitant adenocarcinomas to clarify the stage of lung
adenocarcinoma pathogenesis in which these genetic alterations are
involved.
 |
Materials and Methods
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From November 1997 through June 1998, 126 patients underwent
surgical resection of lung cancer at our hospital. AAH was found in 22
patients with adenocarcinoma, 2 patients with adenosquamous carcinoma,
1 with squamous cell carcinoma, and 1 with large cell carcinoma. AAH is
much more frequently found in patients with adenocarcinoma than in
those with other histological subtypes.
We analyzed LOH on chromosomes 9q and 16p in 18 AAHs and 17
adenocarcinomas from 11 patients. The patients characteristics are
summarized in Table 1
. There were four
males and seven females, and their ages ranged from 47 to 74 years.
Seven of the 11 (64%) patients were non-smokers. Two patients had a
past history of malignancy. Three patients had a family history of
malignancy in first-degree relatives; two were lung cancers, one a
gastric cancer. There were three patients with multiple
adenocarcinomas, and nine with multiple AAHs. All patients with
multiple adenocarcinomas had concomitant multiple AAHs.
All resected specimens prefixed with 100% methanol were sliced at 5-mm
intervals and examined macroscopically. Appropriate tissue sections
were fixed with 100% methanol and embedded in paraffin. It is
difficult to extract enough amount of DNA for molecular analysis from a
tiny lesion, such as AAH. DNA extracted from formalin-fixed materials
is often fragmented artificially. Using methanol fixation, even
relatively higher molecular weight DNA was preserved
well.21
Primary lung adenocarcinomas and AAHs were evaluated microscopically by
conventional hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining. The pathological
characteristics of the 17 adenocarcinomas and 18 AAHs were assessed by
two pathologists (AO and TY).
Histological Evaluation of Adenocarcinoma
Histological typing of adenocarcinomas was performed according to
the World Health Organization classification of lung
tumors.14
Nuclear atypia was categorized into three
grades: 1, nuclei that were uniform in size and slightly larger than
those of reactive type II alveolar epithelial cells; 2, nuclei that
were in uniform size and up to twice the size of reactive type II
alveolar epithelial cells; 3, nuclei of various sizes and more than
twice the size of reactive type II alveolar epithelial cells. The
mitotic indices were divided into three grades: 1,
5 mitotic cells/10
high-power fields; 2, 6 to 15/10 high-power fields; 3,
16/10
high-power fields. The scar grades were classified into four grades
based on fibrotic foci in the tumors: 1, no or minimal desmoplasia; 2,
fibroblastic tissue with a small amount of collagen; 3, fibroblastic
tissue with moderate to abundant collagen; 4, hyalinized
tissue.22
Histological Criteria of AAH
We analyzed solitary AAHs in this study, AAHs continuous with or
directly adjacent to a primary adenocarcinoma were not included. The
histological diagnosis of AAH was based on the following criteria, as
previously described.23
1) The lesion had well-defined
boundaries and consisted of proliferation of single-layered atypical
epithelial cells without central scar formation or collapse (Figure 1A)
. 2) The cytoplasm was eosinophilic,
and the cells often had a rounded or domed appearance resembling either
type II pneumocytes or Clara cells. 3) The atypical cells in AAH had
usually hyperchromatic nuclei and inconspicuous nucleoli, but the
atypia was less marked than that of adenocarcinoma cells. AAHs were
classified into two grades:24
1) Low-grade AAH; the cell
density was low to moderate, and the cells were arranged in a single
layer, intermittently or focally and continuously, on the alveolar
septa (Figure 1B)
. Their nuclei were mostly small, but occasionally
large, and exhibited lesser degrees of variation in size, shape, and
hyperchromasia than high-grade AAH. 2) High-grade AAH; the cells were
continuously and densely arranged in a single layer, but did not
exhibit the piled-up structure often observed in adenocarcinoma (Figure 1C)
. Their nuclei showed significant atypia, but lacked the margin
irregularity and eosinophilic nucleoli observed in frank
adenocarcinoma.

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Figure 1. Histological features of AAH (H&E
staining). A: The lesion has
well-defined boundaries and no central scar formation or collapse.
B: Low-grade AAH: the cell density is low to moderate, with
the cells arranged in a single layer, intermittently or focally and
continuously, on the alveolar septa. C: High-grade AAH: the
cells are continuously and densely arranged in a single layer, but do
not exhibit the piled-up structure often observed in adenocarcinoma.
Original magnifications: x2
(A), x150
(B), x100
(C).
|
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Microdissection and DNA Extraction
Serial 5-µm slices were made from each block for
microdissection. The slides were dewaxed with xylene and rehydrated in
a graded alcohol series, then stained with H&E to define the location
of AAHs or adenocarcinomas. Microdissection was performed under a
microscope (BX50W1; Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) by using a microcapillary
tube drawn to a thin tip with a micropipette puller (PC-10; Narishige,
Tokyo, Japan) and a joystick-operated hydraulic micromanipulator
(ONO-125; Olympus-Narishige, Tokyo, Japan). The microdissected cells
were allowed to adhere to Parafilm (American Can, Greenwich, CT)
and placed in 500-µl microcentrifuge tubes. Normal lymph node tissue
or normal lung tissue was scraped with a 27-gauge needle to provide a
normal control. DNA was extracted with a DNA extractor WB kit (Wako
Pure Chemicals, Osaka, Japan). The DNA concentration was adjusted to
50 cell equivalents per µl.
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)-Based LOH Analysis
We analyzed LOH on chromosome 9q (including the TSC1
gene-associated region) and 16p (including the TSC2
gene-associated region), using the following microsatellite markers.
Four markers on 9q from centromere to telomere, D9S146
(9q13), D9S149 (9q34), D9S150 (9q34), and
DBH (9q34);25
and four markers on 16p from
centromere to telomere, D16S300 (16p11.1-11.2),
D16S292 (16p13.12-13.13), D16S291 (16p13.1), and
D16S525 (16p13.3).26,27
PCR was performed in a
20-µl volume of a mixture containing 10 mmol/L Tris (pH 8.3), 50
mmol/L KCl, 1.0 to 1.5 mmol/L MgCl2, 200 µmol/L
of each Cy 5'-end labeled primer (Pharmacia Biotech, Tokyo, Japan),
0.25 U of Taq polymerase (TaKaRa Biomedicals, Shiga, Japan)
and then cycled 36 to 38 times in a GeneAmp PCR System 9600 (Perkin
Elmer, Foster City, CA); each cycle consisted of 1 minute at 94°C for
denaturation, 2 minutes at 55 to 62°C for annealing, 1 minute at
72°C for strand elongation, and 7 minutes at 72°C for final
elongation. The PCR products were diluted with a loading buffer
consisting of 95% formamide, 20 mmol/L ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid
(pH 8.0), and Dextran blue, and denatured for 5 minutes at 98°C. The
samples were electrophoresed on 5% polyacrylamide gels containing 8.3
mol/L urea for 3 hours at 34 W using an ALFred DNA sequencer (Pharmacia
Biotech). To confirm the reproducibility of the experiment, all cases
were examined at least twice by independent PCR and electrophoresis.
LOH was considered to be present if the reduction rate of the height of
the allele in the tumor was >40%, as previously
defined.28
Statistical Analyses
The two-sided Fishers exact test was used for statistical
analysis (Stat View-J 5.0, Macintosh). A P value <0.05 was
considered significant.
 |
Results
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We examined 18 AAHs and 17 adenocarcinomas of the lung from 11
patients for LOH on chromosome 9q, including the TSC1
gene-associated region (9q34), and chromosome16p, including the
TSC2 gene-associated region (16p13.3), by using two sets of
four microsatellite markers, respectively. Representative examples are
shown in Figure 2
. The distributions of
9q region deletions in AAHs and adenocarcinomas are shown in Figure 3
. Seven of 18 AAHs (39%) and 9 of 17
adenocarcinomas (53%) showed LOH at one or more loci on chromosome 9q.
Seven of nine adenocarcinomas with LOH on 9q (78%) harbored LOH at all
informative loci on 9q (complete LOH). However, only one AAH showed
complete LOH on 9q. Five of seven AAHs with LOH on 9q harbored LOH at
the same locus as the concomitant adenocarcinomas.

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Figure 2. Representative examples of microsatellite analyses of chromosomes 9q
and 16p in AAHs and adenocarcinomas
(AC). A:
AAH-17 retained heterozygosity at D9S146. AC-16 showed LOH
at D9S146. B: Both AAH-11 and AC-10 showed LOH at
D16S291.
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Figure 3. The distributions of deletions on 9q in AAHs and adenocarcinomas. AC,
primary lung adenocarcinoma.
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The distributions of deletions on 16p in AAHs and adenocarcinomas are
shown in Figure 4
. Four of 18 AAHs (22%)
and 6 of 17 adenocarcinomas (35%) showed LOH at one or more loci on
chromosome 16p. These four AAHs were from the same patient (patient 6).
Two of six adenocarcinomas with LOH on 16p (33%) showed complete LOH
on 16p, but all AAHs harbored LOH at only one locus among all of the
informative loci. One AAH harbored LOH at the same locus as the
concomitant adenocarcinomas.

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Figure 4. The distributions of deletions on 16q in AAHs and adenocarcinomas. AC,
primary lung adenocarcinoma.
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The TSC1 gene is located between D9S149 and
D9S150. Five of seven AAHs with LOH on 9q (71%) and seven
of nine adenocarcinomas with LOH on 9q (78%) showed LOH at loci
adjacent to the TSC1 gene, ie, loci including
D9S149 or D9S150. The TSC2 gene is
located between D16S291 and D16S525. None of the
AAHs or adenocarcinomas harbored LOH at D16S525. One of four
AAHs with LOH on 16p (25%) and five of six adenocarcinomas with LOH on
16p (83%) showed LOH at loci adjacent to the TSC2 gene, ie,
at D16S291.
The frequencies of LOH at all loci examined were as follows: 5 of 20
informative samples (25%) at D9S146, 7 of 29 (29%) at
D9S149, 11 of 28 (39%) at D9S150, 7 of 20 (35%)
at DBH, 3 of 13 (23%) at D16S300, 3 of 11 (27%)
at D16S292, 6 of 25 (24%) at D16S29, and none
(0%) at D16S525.
We analyzed the relationships between LOH on chromosome 9q or
16p, or LOH at microsatellite loci adjacent to the TSC1 or
TSC2 gene, and the following histological characteristics of
adenocarcinoma and AAH: size, histological subtype (bronchioloalveolar
carcinoma versus other subtypes), vascular invasion,
lymphatic permeation, nuclear atypia, mitotic index, or scar grade of
adenocarcinoma, and the size or histological grade of AAH. No
histological characteristic was found to be associated with LOH on 9q
or 16p, or with LOH at microsatellite loci adjacent to the
TSC1 or TSC2 gene (Tables 2 and 3)
.
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Table 2. Relationships between Histological Characteristics of Primary
Adenocarcinoma and LOH on Chromosomes 9q and 16p
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Discussion
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Little is known about the etiology of lung adenocarcinoma, as
compared with squamous cell carcinoma. AAH has recently been implicated
as a preneoplastic lesion of lung adenocarcinoma. Miller29
initially proposed a pulmonary adenoma-carcinoma sequence analogous to
that of the colon. AAH is much more frequently associated with
adenocarcinoma than other histological subtypes of lung
cancer.30
Multiple AAHs are occasionally detected in
patients with multiple lung adenocarcinomas.29
In our
series, the histological subtype was adenocarcinoma in 22 of 26 (85%)
lung cancer patients with AAH, and all patients with multiple
adenocarcinomas had concomitant multiple AAHs. These findings suggest
that AAH and adenocarcinoma might be induced by common etiological
factors.
AAH has been reported to have several genetic alterations in common
with lung adenocarcinoma. Mutations of K-ras codon 12 have
variously been detected in 15 to 50% of AAHs and 22 to 42% of
adenocarcinomas.7-10
LOH on chromosome 3p was detected in
10 to 18% of AAHs and 12 to 67% of adenocarcinomas.4-6
LOH on chromosome 9p was detected in 5 to 13% of AAHs and 19 to 50%
of adenocarcinomas.4-6
We demonstrated AAHs to harbor LOH
on chromosomes 9q and 16p, LOHs that are also found in lung
adenocarcinomas. The frequency of LOH on 9q, especially in the
TSC1 gene associated regions, was high. Petersen and
colleagues31
reported LOH on 9q34 to be significantly
associated with lung adenocarcinoma. Our results were also consistent
with this observation. The relatively high frequency of LOH on 9q34 in
AAH lesions and adenocarcinomas suggests that a novel tumor suppressor
gene for lung adenocarcinomas may exist in this region, and the
TSC1 gene is one candidate.
Hung and colleagues3
and Kishimoto and
colleagues4
detected more frequent and extensive 3p and 9p
losses in carcinomas than in corresponding preneoplastic lesions, and
the identical allele was lost among them, an allele-specific loss.
Their findings were consistent with our results. Six of seven AAHs with
LOH on 9q and all AAHs with LOH on 16p showed LOH at only one
microsatellite locus. However, the allelic losses on 9q and 16p were
more extensive in adenocarcinomas than in AAHs. In particular, the rate
of complete LOH on 9q was high (78%) in adenocarcinomas. This
progressive loss on 9q during progression might suggest existence of
more than one tumor suppressor gene on 9q for lung adenocarcinoma. In
addition, the identical allele was lost among multiple AAHs and
concomitant adenocarcinomas in the same patients. These observations
indicate that one allele might be inactivated congenitally because of
mutation or epigenetically, and the remaining allelic loss would then
be acquired. This suggests a possible role of genetic predisposition in
the pathogenesis of lung adenocarcinoma with AAH. In our series, 7 of
11 (64%) patients with lung adenocarcinoma and corresponding AAH were
non-smokers and 5 of 11 (45%) had either a past or family history of
malignancy. These findings might also indicate genetic predisposition.
Muir and colleagues18
reported that MMPH is
distinguishable from AAH by the following features: AAH cells have a
greater degree of nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratio than MMPH, less well
circumscribed with peripheral lepidic spread, less prominent
interstitial reticuln, and fewer air space macrophages than MMPH.
However, some investigators have reported that MMPH is so similar to
AAH morphologically that histological distinction between MMPH and AAH
is difficult.19
Thus, we supposed that these two
conditions might share some molecular mechanisms of pathogenesis.
Genetic alteration in TSC1 gene-associated
regions is a candidate.
If we postulate that the TSC1 gene itself is
responsible for early development of lung adenocarcinoma, there would
be an obvious discrepancy. We would more frequently encounter TSC
patients with MMPH. However, MMPH is believed to be a rare pulmonary
manifestation of TSC, and only a few such cases have been
reported.18,19
How can we explain this discrepancy?
Because MMPH is a subtle pulmonary lesion, underestimation of the
incidence of MMPH might be one explanation. The life expectancy of
patients with TSC is relatively short,32
and this is
another possible reason. We do not understand how many genetic
alterations are required for formations of MMPH and AAH. If several
genetic alterations are required, low incidence of MMPH association in
TSC patients might be explained. This is the third possible reason. The
forth and most probable explanation is that TSC1 itself is
not the responsible gene but rather that some novel tumor suppressor
gene for lung adenocarcinoma exists very close to the TSC1
gene.
In our present study, we analyzed only a limited number of lesions.
Further study of a large number of adenocarcinomas and AAH lesions is
clearly required. We did not analyzed LOH in AAH adjacent to
adenocarcinoma, because it was difficult to convincingly differentiate
the border between AAH and adenocarcinoma. If we could analyze several
adenocarcinomas obviously associated with AAH adjacently, it would
become more convincing. In addition, an extensive mutation analysis or
demonstrating the suppressed expression of the TSC1 gene in
lung adenocarcinoma might be helpful in answering the above question.
 |
Footnotes
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Address reprint requests to Hiroyasu Esumi, Director of the National Cancer Center Research Institute East, 6-5-1, Kashiwanoha, Kashiwa, Chiba, 277-8577, Japan. E-mail: hesumi{at}east.ncc.go.jp
Supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid for Cancer Research from the Ministry of Health and Welfare of Japan, and a Smoking Research Foundation Grant for Biomedical Research.
Accepted for publication August 14, 2001.
 |
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