Chromosome damage and sister chromatid exchanges in lymphocyte cultures from patients with two primary cancers

Chromosome damage and sister chromatid exchanges in lymphocyte cultures from patients with two primary cancers

Chromosome Damage and Sister Chromatid Exchanges in Lymphocyte Cultures from Patients with Two Primary Cancers Thelma Brown, Audrey A. Dawson, Ian A. ...

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Chromosome Damage and Sister Chromatid Exchanges in Lymphocyte Cultures from Patients with Two Primary Cancers Thelma Brown, Audrey A. Dawson, Ian A. McDonald, Irene Bullock, and Jessie L. Watt

ABSTRACT:

Sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) and chromosome damage were scored in lymphocyte cultures from 11 patients with two or more primary cancers and were compared with normal controls. None of the patients had a constitutional chromosome anomaly, but six showed evidence of chromosome instability, which could not be accounted for by treatment, expressed either as elevated SCE frequency or increased nonspecific chromosome damage and chromosome loss. Chromosome damage included major rearrangements as well as deletions and gaps. The possibility of common mechanisms in chromosome instability leading to susceptibility to a heterogeneous group of primary cancers is discussed.

INTRODUCTION Onset of clinical evidence of cancer is almost always a c c o m p a n i e d by c h r o m o s o m e changes. Specific types of c h r o m o s o m e rearrangements are found in m a n y cancers and m a y show clonal evolution. The P h i l a d e l p h i a c h r o m o s o m e (Ph), for example, is found in the early stages of chronic m y e l o i d leukemia (CML), and clones with trisomy 8 and i s o c h r o m o s o m e 17q may develop later [1-3]. High susceptibility to cancer has been related to constitutional chromosome anomalies that may be specific, such as the elevated incidence of leukemia associated with Down's s y n d r o m e [4], or to general c h r o m o s o m e fragility, as in the chrom o s o m e breakage syndromes, Fanconi's anemia, Bloom's syndrome, ataxia telangiectasia, and xeroderma p i g m e n t o s u m [5-7]. Chromosome fragility can be seen as increased frequency of c h r o m o s o m e breaks and rearrangements or as an increase in the frequency of sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs), either s p o n t a n e o u s l y as in Bloom's s y n d r o m e or as a hypersensitive response to carcinogens [8-10]. Variation in sensitivity to carcinogens, paralleled by differences in SCE frequency, has also been seen in response to smoking. Smoking is k n o w n to cause elevated SCE frequency [11-13], and H o p k i n and Evans [14] found that smokers with lung cancer had more SCEs in their l y m p h o c y t e s than equally heavy smokers without lung cancer.

From the Departments of Genetics and Medicine, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland. Address requests for reprints to Dr. Thelma Brown, Department of Genetics, University of Aberdeen, Medical School Buildings, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, AB9 2ZD, Scotland. Received April 4, 1984; accepted August 24, 1984.

35 © 1985 Elsevier Science Publishing Co., Inc. 52 Vanderbilt Ave., New York, NY 10017

Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics 17, 35~I2(1985) 0165-4608/85/$03.30

36

T. B r o w n et al.

The i n v e s t i g a t i o n p r e s e n t e d h e r e was carried out o n a g r o u p of patients w i t h t w o or m o r e p r i m a r y cancers that w e r e of a t y p e not k n o w n to be a s s o c i a t e d w i t h a h i g h e r i n c i d e n c e of a s e c o n d cancer. Thus, t h e y w e r e c o n s i d e r e d to h a v e an inherent i n c r e a s e in s u s c e p t i b i l i t y to cancer. T h e i n t e n t i o n was to find out if c a n c e r s u s c e p t i b i l i t y is a s s o c i a t e d w i t h e l e v a t e d SCE levels or w i t h an i n c r e a s e in general or specific c h r o m o s o m e breakage and r e a r r a n g e m e n t s .

PATIENTS AND CONTROLS E l e v e n patients (five male, six female, age range 6 0 - 8 1 years) w e r e s e l e c t e d w h o h a d d e v e l o p e d t w o or m o r e n e o p l a s m s that w e r e h i s t o l o g i c a l l y different, so that t h e y w e r e b o t h clearly p r i m a r y cancers, not a single c a n c e r w i t h metastases. The patients can be d i v i d e d into three c l i n i c a l groups as follows: G r o u p 1: T h r e e patients w h o s e first t u m o r was s q u a m o u s c a r c i n o m a of the skin, w i t h o u t m e t a s t a s e s to l y m p h nodes. G r o u p 2: F o u r p a t i e n t s w h o s e t u m o r s w e r e b o t h c a r c i n o m a s of i n t e r n a l organs but w h o h a d r e c e i v e d n e i t h e r r a d i o t h e r a p y nor c h e m o t h e r a p y prior to s a m p l i n g . G r o u p 3: F o u r patients w h o s e t u m o r s w e r e b o t h c a r c i n o m a s of i n t e r n a l organs but w h o had r e c e i v e d r a d i o t h e r a p y or c h e m o t h e r a p y . O n e p a t i e n t (DC8) in this g r o u p had b e e n treated w i t h c o m b i n a t i o n c h e m o t h e r a p y ( c h l o r a m b u c i l , vincristine, and p r e d n i s o l o n e ) o n the 2 days prior to s a m p l i n g . T h e o t h e r three p a t i e n t s had r a d i o t h e r a p y t r e a t m e n t for the first cancer. C l i n i c a l details of the p a t i e n t s are s u m m a r i z e d in Table 1. Six n o r m a l i n d i v i d u a l s , f o u r m a l e a n d two female, age range 2 5 - 5 0 , w h o w e r e all n o n s m o k e r s w e r e u s e d as controls.

METHODS M e t a p h a s e p r e p a r a t i o n s of P H A - s t i m u l a t e d l y m p h o c y t e s w e r e m a d e by r o u t i n e m e t h o d s f r o m s a m p l e s of w h o l e b l o o d [15]. Forty-eight h o u r c u l t u r e s w e r e u s e d to score c h r o m o s o m e breaks and rearrangements. For u n i f o r m q u a n t i t a t i v e assessment, c h r o m o s o m e d a m a g e was s c o r e d in 50 G i e m s a - s t a i n e d m e t a p h a s e s , e a c h w i t h 46 c e n t r o m e r e s , w h i c h w e r e not s e l e c t e d for

Table 1

C l i n i c a l details of d o u b l e c a n c e r patients Time before analysis of

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Patient

Sex

First tumor site

DC1 DC2 DC3 DC4 DC5 DC6

M M M F F M

Skin (multiple} Skin (multiple) Skin Colon Colon Bronchus

DC7 DC8

F F

Breast Colon

DC9 DC10 DC11

F M F

Breast Larynx Colon

Second tumor site Larynx Bladder Kidney Bladder Lung Chronic lymphocytic leukemia Rectum Prolymphocytic leukemia Bronchus Prostate Bladder

X-ray

Chemotherapy

Smoker

--2 Months ----

-------

No Yes No Yes No No

---

-" Day

No No

16 Years 12 Years 1 Year, 4 months

----

Yes Yes Yes

37

Cytogenic of Multiple Primary Cancers

quality. A n e u p l o i d and p o l y p l o i d cells seen w h i l e scanning for the 50 complete cells were recorded. Cells with more than 46 c h r o m o s o m e s were not scored as a n e u p l o i d if extra chromosomes were noticeably different and therefore probably "strays" from other broken metaphase cells. Banding (G and C) was used to locate damage. SCEs were scored in 30 fluorescence plus giemsa (FPG)-stained metaphases [16] from 66-hour cultures containing 20 I~g/ml b r o m o d e o x y u r i d i n e (BrdU). Samples from a patient and a control were assayed at the same time under identical conditions. RESULTS

SCE Frequency From Figure 1 and Table 2 it can be seen that one patient in each of groups 1 (DC2) and 2 (DC4) had slightly raised SCE levels that could have been due to smoking, but otherwise, SCE frequencies in patients and controls were similar in these two groups. No SCE score was recorded for one patient in group 1 (DC3) because of lack of metaphases in BrdU cultures. The patients and controls were not m a t c h e d for age, but age has been shown to have little or no effect on SCE frequency [17]. The most significantly raised SCE frequencies occurred in group 3. The high score in DC8 was probably due to recent chemotherapy, but patients DC9 and DCIO

Figure 1 Mean number of SCEs per cell for each patient compared with individual control and with pooled control mean and 95% distribution limits. Pooled control parameters include one mean per individual to avoid bias toward controls providing more than one sample. Significance of difference between patient and individual control: "0.01 < p < 0.05; *'0.001 < p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001. DOUBLE CANCER PATIENTS SCE frequency of patients compared with controls

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

20 18

OPatient • Control

16 -

14 + 1.96~

12 03

~

Mean of controls

lO -

I

DC1

DC2

DC4

DC5 DC6 DC7 Patients

*1

DC8 DC9 DC10 DC11

1.96~

Significance difference

of

38

T. Brown et al. had similarly high SCE scores that could not be attributed to direct effects of treatment, as both these patients had received only radiotherapy many years previously.

Chromosome Damage and Aneuploidy At 48 hr, metaphase lymphocytes are almost all in first division in culture; therefore, chromosome damage seen at this stage was probably present in vivo. From 48-hr Giemsa-stained preparations (Table 2), 75 major damage events were found in 502 complete (46 centromere) metaphases from these double cancer patients. A complete spectrum of rearrangements was seen, including dicentrics, rings, translocations, pericentric inversions, and deletions (Fig. 2). Most of the damage was of the chromosome type; only two chromatid interchanges (quadriradials) and two chromatid deletions were found. In control samples, only three major damage events (all deletions) were seen in 550 metaphases. Chromosome damage was very unevenly distributed among patients (Table 2). Two patients in group 2 (DC4, DC6) and all four patients in group 3 (DC8 to DC11) had more damage than any of the controls. The frequency of gaps in chromosomes from patients was double that of the control group; nine patients had more than the control mean and two were above the 95% distribution limit. Similarly, aneuploid cells were twice as frequent in the patients as in the controls, with one patient outside the 95% limit. Telomeric stickiness was seen almost exclusively in one patient (DC8), most frequently involving chromosome #16 and G-group chromosomes. With a few exceptions, damage and chromosome loss tended to be distributed as expected [18] among chromosome groups, with damage events being proportional and chromosome loss inversely proportional to the length of the chromosome (Table 3). Chromosome #16 was involved in more events than expected, mainly in one patient (DC8), but G-banding showed no specific breakpoint or type of rearrangement. The only apparently nonrandom location of damage was in chromosome #2, where 12 of the 17 damage events involved the q-arm, including an endoreduplication and 10 events resulting in 2 q - (6 of these occurred in patient DC9). The main difference between distribution of chromosome loss in patients and controls was an excess loss from group C (Table 3), which G-banding showed to be due to selective loss of chromosomes #8, #11, and X. The excess in overall loss of chromosomes in the patients compared to controls could have been mainly mechanical loss during preparation, perhaps due to increased membrane fragility. Selective loss of chromosomes #8, #11, and X, however, probably reflects a true preferential loss of these chromosome in circulating lymphocytes. This selective loss was limited to five of the six female patients and was probably age-related, as preferential loss of C-group chromosomes in aging females is a well-known phenomenon [19, 20].

DISCUSSION The 11 double cancer patients were a heterogeneous group with a probable common susceptibility to cancer. No constitutional changes were detected, although this cannot be considered to be a negative association in view of the small sample size. The patients were divided into groups on a clinical basis (Table 1), and the cytogenetic results show that the first group (with initial skin cancers) was most like the controls, and the third group (with two carcinomas of internal organs, treated with radiotherapy or chemotherapy) deviated most from controls. When all the evidence is taken into account, 6 of the 11 patients showed evi-

DC1 DS2 DC3 DC4 DC5 DC6 DC7 DC8 DC9 DC10 DC11

2

180 30

30

30

10.3

12.26

12.0

1

0.2 1.0

1 0 0 3 0 5 1 38 6 4 17 75

8 30 0 30 30 30 30 27 30 30 30 275

9.9 13.4 0 12.7 11.0 10.0 9.9 17.6 18.6 15.9 9.7 12.9

bFrom all 48-hr preparations, banded and unbanded.

1

0.7

1 0.1

0 0 1 0 O 1 0 0 1 1 0 4

C/;IROMOSOME CHROMATID

Major d a m a g e

10

13

65 6

16 13 6 10 11 22 9 11 11 12 2 123

50

50

550 50

23 50 29 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 502

Gaps C e l l s scored

N u m b e r of d a m a g e e v e n t s ° i n 46 c e n t r o m e r e m e t a p h a s e s

°From 48-hr Giemsa-stained preparations only.

Total Pooled c on tr ols Total Mean/ sample Upper limit ( m ea n + 1.96 SD) Maximum in range

3

2

1

M e a n / C el ls cell scored

SCEs

Cytogenetic analysis

Group Patient

Table 2

15

15

68 6

5 6 11 3 10 11 10 44 5 11 12 128

+ (42-45) (47-48)

Aneuploid c e l l s / 50 (46 centromere) cells

1.0

2 0.2

Polyploid

Location

0

1 16

1 20

0

15

18 1

1

1

0

2 13

1 6

1

2

TELOMERIC MULTIPLE CHROMOSOME CHROMOSOME STICKINESS DAMAGE #16 2q 1

Type

Nonrandom damage b

¢.D

_.-

-t--IX..ll”-i^-

.-.

-.=---“..“l”,~““~-_-“_.-..“__~_I

.

;I_ i_._____.__

Examples of damage. (a) Two chromosome SCE score (39) and dicentric (Z C-group chromosomes).

Figure 2

A deletions

and fragments

(chromosomes

#

and #2) and centric

B ring (chromosome

#18). (b) High

41

Cytogenetic of Multiple Primary Cancers

Table 3

Location of damage and missing chromosomes

Damage events

A

B

C

1

2

3

(A) Total (B) Divided by chromosome pairs

20 20

17 17

12 12

14 7

78 10

Missing chromosomes

A

B

C

D

6 1

6 3

86 17

2.8 1.4

4.3 6.5

15.9 9.6

(A) Total Patients Controls (B) Percent of total Patients Controls

D

E 16

17

18

7 2

16 16

4 4

2 2

E

F

G

17 4

42 20

24 6

48 18

8.2 5.8

20.2 29.1

17.3 13.1

31.2 34.6

F

G

2 1

10 4

dence of c h r o m o s o m e instability in different ways (Table 2; patients DC4, 6, 8 through 11). This could only be partially accounted for in two patients; high SCE frequency was related to c h e m o t h e r a p y in patient DC8, and c h r o m o s o m e damage was related to recent r a d i o t h e r a p y in patient DC11. Cytogenetic analysis was carried out on PHA-stimulated lymphocytes, not on cells directly involved in the neoplasia. Even in the cases of chronic l y m p h o c y t i c leukemia (DC6) and p r o l y m p h o c y t i c leukemia (DC8), the leukemic cells were probably B lymphocytes, whereas the cells r e s p o n d i n g to PHA stimulation w o u l d be m a i n l y T l y m p h o c y t e s [21]. The considerable a m o u n t of nonspecific chromosome damage found in cells not directly involved in neoplasia suggests an underlying chromosome instability. Two of the double cancer patients with evidence of c h r o m o s o m e instability (DC9, DC10) had u n a c c o u n t a b l y high SCE scores. Chromosome breakage syndromes are k n o w n to be associated with high SCE frequencies s p o n t a n e o u s l y (Bloom's syndrome) or as an exaggerated reaction to carcinogens. It w o u l d be informative to take blood samples from cancer patients with s u s p i c i o u s l y high SCE frequencies before therapy and expose their l y m p h o c y t e s to a m i l d carcinogen in vitro to see if a hypersensitive response occurs. These results may augment present ideas regarding oncogenes, as cancer-related chromosome rearrangements have been shown to activate oncogenes that i n d u c e cell proliferation [see reference 3 for review]. Chromosome instability, as seen in some patients with double cancers, leads to breaks occurring at m a n y different chromosome locations in different cells. This must increase the chance of damage occurring, w h i c h could activate an oncogene to initiate the b u i l d - u p of a clone with the chromosome rearrangement that triggered the neoplastic transformation. Thus, tissues not involved in the n e o p l a s m may have nonspecific damage, while transformed cells show clonal d e v e l o p m e n t of specific types of damage. Continued instability w o u l d give rise to the possibility of a second p r i m a r y cancer d e v e l o p i n g also by a chance break activating a different oncogene. The types of cancer d e v e l o p e d w o u l d d e p e n d on w h i c h oncogene was activated in w h i c h tissue. A n a p p a r e n t l y heterogenous group of cancers could in this w a y have a c o m m o n initiatory mechanism in c h r o m o s o m e instability. In summary, our results tentatively indicate that a significant p r o p o r t i o n of peo-

42

T. B r o w n et al.

ple with multiple cancers may have an underlying inherent chromosome instability, w h i c h is s i m i l a r to t h e b e t t e r - d e f i n e d c h r o m o s o m e b r e a k a g e s y n d r o m e s . W e h a v e also p r o v i d e d s o m e s u p p o r t for t h e i d e a t h a t u n a c c o u n t a b l y h i g h SCE frequency may indicate cancer susceptibility in some individuals.

This work was carried out with financial support from the Cancer Research Campaign.

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