Cytogenetic study of chronic lymphocytic leukemia in ten Japanese patients with a case of the same chromosome abnormality both in T and B cells.

Journal: Cancer Genetics And Cytogenetics
Published:
Abstract

Peripheral blood lymphocytes from ten patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) stimulated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA), pokeweed mitogen (PWM), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and T-cell growth factor were studied cytogenetically. Eight of ten cases were clinically and immunologically B-cell CLL, and two cases were T-cell CLL. Chromosome analysis revealed that one patient, diagnosed as B-cell CLL, had a clonal abnormality in the leukemic cells. The abnormal karyotype was 46,XY,+3,-15,t(10;19)(q22;p13),t(11;14) (q13;q32),13q+,17q-. The frequencies of the abnormal cell stimulated with PHA, PWM, and EBV were 50%, 13%, and 100%, respectively. Finding the same clonal abnormality after stimulation with three different mitogens suggests that the factor responsible for the development of CLL might affect the stem cell common to T-cell and B-cell lymphocytes. In cells with this abnormal karyotype, chromosome 13q+ seems to have a homogeneous staining region. In the present series of B-cell CLL, no trisomy 12 known to be the specific chromosome abnormality was observed.

Authors
T Shinohara, S Miwa, S Hasegawa, K Yamamoto, A Tonomura