An alphoid repetitive DNA (D8Z2) probe specific for the pericentromeric region of chromosome 8 was used to detect extra copies of chromosome 8 in bone marrow cells obtained from 10 patients with hematological disorders and five controls. Numerical aberrations of chromosome 8 were established by conventional banding techniques. Trisomy 8 was found in four patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and three with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Three additional patients with MDS exhibited an extra chromosome 8 in only one metaphase. In five of the seven trisomy cases, the presence of the trisomy 8 clone was confirmed by in situ hybridization (ISH). In one case of AML with trisomy 8, detected by GTG-banding, no significant numbers of cells containing three spots were found using the alphoid repetitive probe; however, hybridization with a chromosome 8-specific library revealed that the alleged extra chromosome 8 was a translocation chromosome containing only the long arm of chromosome 8. Due to a lack of material, it was not possible to achieve optimal ISH results on the trisomy 8 bone marrow cells of patient 7. In the three MDS patients with a single trisomy 8 metaphase, a slight, albeit significant, increase of trisomy 8 interphase cells was found with ISH. We conclude that this probe is useful for cytogenetic studies. Moreover, ISH, in general, is a powerful tool for precise classification of chromosomal aberrations and can also contribute significantly to the clinical evaluation of patients with hematological disorders.
Bone marrow cells of four patients with t(1;7) and myelodysplasia or acute myeloid leukemia were analyzed using nonradioactive in situ hydridisation. As probes, centromeric alphoid DNA sequences of chromosomes 1 and 7, a satellite DNA probe for 1q12, and chromosome-specific libraries of chromosomes 1 and 7 were used. The breakpoints of the t(1;7)(p11;p11) as determined by banding analysis could be studied more accurately, and the recently proposed designation t(1;7)(cen;cen) was confirmed in all four cases. Colocalization of alphoid DNA sequences of chromosomes 1 and 7 by double target in situ hybridisation was demonstrated in metaphase cells and also in interphase nuclei. The in situ hybridisation method described is applicable for the screening of peripheral blood cells or archival material.
A new EBV positive human B-cell line, BONNA-12 was established from splenic cells of a patient with a hairy cell leukemia (HCL). BONNA-12 cells grew spontaneously and formed colonies in semisolid media. Although the BONNA-12 cell line was identical with the patient's spleen cells by HLA analysis and Southern blot examination of minisatellite DNA patterns, the immunoglobulin heavy and light chain rearrangement patterns differed from the original HCL. Cytogenetic analysis of the BONNA-12 cell line demonstrated in the major cell clone a 47, X, -Y, +9, +12 karyotype. Trisomy 12 is a characteristic abnormality in chronic lymphocytic leukemia that also rarely occurs in HCL. The BONNA-12 cell line is of potential value in the study of trisomy 12 in chronic B cell malignancies.
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