Cytogenetics in Hereditary Malignant Melanoma and Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome: Is Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome a Chromosome Instability Disorder? Nell Caporaso, Mark H. Greene, Shein Tsai, Linda Williams Pickle, and John J. Mulvihill
ABSTRACT: Analysis of peripheral blood lymphocyte Giemsa-banded karyotypes was performed on 163 family members from 13 melanoma-prone families. Patients were classified regarding the presence of cutaneous melanoma and dysplastic nevi (a well characterized melanoma precursar), and each karyotype was scared far the n u m b e r of cells containing the following: major structural, minor structural, and numerical abnormalities. No clonal cytogenetic abnormalities were observed. Cutaneoas malignant melanoma and dysplastic nevi syndrome patients each had increased abnormalities of all types combined, compared with paoled controis (i.e., normal family members, and spouses; respectively, X2 = 6.02, p = 0.01; X2 = 5.29, p = 0.02). There was a statistically significant p-value for major structural abnormalities far melanoma patients and numerical abnormalities for the dysplastic nevi patients. Minor structural abnormalities did not differ in any of the groups. In addition, studies of ultraviolet induced sister chromatid exchange, in vitro tetraploidy, and extended prophase banding were performed on a limited number of patients. No significant differences between cases and controls were observed in these tests. Our data suggest that a chromosome instability abnormality may contribute to the pathogenesis of hereditary melanoma.
INTRODUCTION F a m i l i a l c u t a n e o u s m a l i g n a n t m e l a n o m a (CMM) w a s first d e s c r i b e d i n 1820 b y Sir W i l l i a m Norris, w h o r e p o r t e d a n a f f e c t e d f a t h e r a n d s o n [1]. O n e h u n d r e d fifty y e a r s later, E. P. C a w l e y r e p o r t e d C M M i n t h r e e m e m b e r s of a s i n g l e f a m i l y [2]. O v e r t h e n e x t t h r e e d e c a d e s s i m i l a r k i n d r e d s w e r e r e p o r t e d , b u t t h e b a s i s for f a m i l i a l s u s c e p t i b i l i t y to C M M r e m a i n e d o b s c u r e . In 1978, t h e c l i n i c a l a n d h i s t o l o g i c f e a t u r e s of a m e l a n o c y t i c p r e c u r s o r to C M M w e r e d e s c r i b e d i n s e v e n f a m i l i e s . T h e d i s o r d e r w a s d e s i g n a t e d t h e B - K m o l e s y n d r o m e ( n a m e d after f a m i l i e s B a n d K, t h e first t w o k i n d r e d s s t u d i e d ) [3, 4]. A f f e c t e d i n d i v i d u a l s h a d m o r p h o l o g i c a l l y a t y p i c a l m o l e s
From the Family Studies Section (N. C, M. H. G.) and Population Studies Section (L. W. P.), Environmental Epidemiology Branch, and Clinical Epidemiology Branch (J. J. M./, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, and Biotech Research Laboratories (S. T.), Rockville, MD.
Address requests for reprints to Dr. Nell Caparaso, Family Studies Section, Environmental Epidemiology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Landou Bldg., Room 3C-29, Bethesda, MD 20892. Received June 26, 1985; accepted March 13, 1986.
299 This paper is U.S. government work, cannot be copyrighted, and lies in the public domain.
Cancer Genet Cytogenet 24:299 314(1987) 0165-4608/87/$0.00
300
N. Caporaso et al. that were larger and more irregular in outline, and more numerous than c o m m o n acquired nevi, variably pigmented, and tended to occur on sunshielded skin (e.g., the scalp and bathing trunk area), unusual sites for ordinary moles [5-9]. Histologically, these lesions were characterized by nuclear atypia and a disorderly growth pattern of melanocytes, leading to their current designation as "dysplastic nevi" (DN) [10]. The clinical features of familial dysplastic nevus syndrome (DNS) and the importance of its recognition in the identification of high risk patients and early diagnosis and cure of CMM, have recently been described [9-11]. Furthermore, such high-risk families provide a h u m a n model of the evolution of CMM from directly observable precursor lesions (dysplastic nevi); biological studies in this context may clarify disease mechanisms. For example, we and others have demonstrated that normal cells derived from patients with familial CMM and DN are unusually sensitive to the cytotoxic and mutagenic effect of ultraviolet (UV) light and UV-mimetic chemical carcinogens [12, 13, 34, 35]. Formal genetic analysis of our data has indicated that familial CMM/DN is an autosomal dominant disorder, and suggested that a CMM susceptibility gene might be located on the short arm of chromosome #1, near the Rh blood group locus [15-18]. Here we report the results of cytogenetic studies in members of CMM-prone families, in an effort to determine if chromosome abnormalities contributed to the development of CMM.
MATERIALS AND METHODS Study Design and Specimen Collection The total study cohort included 401 members of 14 melanoma-prone families. Details of the overall study design have been reported previously [11, 18, 19]. Briefly, all surviving first-degree relatives of family members with CMM (and the CMM patients themselves) were examined and classified in one of five groups: (a) melanoma (with or without DN); (b) dysplastic nevi (only); (c) normal blood relative; (d) spouse; and (e) status indeterminate (usually becuase of young age) [6]. With rare exceptions, the diagnoses of CMM and DN were established histologically. With informed consent, peripheral blood lymphocytes were obtained by venipuncture, and fibroblasts for tissue culture were derived from 4-mm punch biopsies of normal skin.
Peripheral Blood Karyotypes Coded, heparinized samples of peripheral blood from 163 subjects from 13 of the 14 melanoma-prone families were karyotyped. Buffy-coat cells were cultured for 72 hours at 37 ° C in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with heat-inactivated 10% fetal calf serum, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 p.g/ml streptomycin, and 2% phytohemagglutinin (PHA). Cells were harvested following 1-2 hours incubation in the presence of 0.05 ~g/ml colcemid. Chromosome preparations were made from fixed (methylacetic acid) cells exposed to hypotonic solution (0.075 M KC1) for 15 minutes. Chromosomes were stained using a standard Giemsa-trypsin technique [20]. From 20 to 57 metaphases (mode, 30) were examined for each individual. Each karyotype was classified as normal or demonstrating one or more of three classes of abnormalities: (a) major structural abnormalities, such as rings, transtocations, fragmentation (three or more chromosomes), dicentrics, insertions, or deletions; (b) minor structural abnormalities, such as breaks or gaps; (c) numerical abnormalities, such as scored in cells with aneuploidy including polyploidy, trisomy, pseudodiploidy, etc., but excluding isolated monosomies unless the same chromosome or chromosome groups was involved in two or more cells [21, 22]. The percentage of cells
Hereditary CMM and NS
301
with each type of abnormality was recorded. Certain patients were excluded from the final analysis: eight patients whose DN status was indeterminate, and five CMM patients who had received chemotherapy prior to phlebotomy. Melanoma patients who were treated with surgery, Bacillus-Calmette-Guerin (BCG), or local radiation were included. Extended prophase banding was performed on five CMM/DN patients. The high resolution banding technique used is described in detail elsewhere [23].
In Vitro Tetraploidy Fibroblast cultures were established from 4-mm punch skin biopsies (Meloy Laboratory, Springfield, VA; Flow General Laboratory, McLean, VA). Cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) supplemented with heat-inactivated 10% fetal bovine serum, 100 U/ml penicillin, and 100 ~.g/ml streptomycin. To make chromosome preparations, colcemid (0.1 ~g/ml, final concentration) was added to a flask of actively growing fibroblast culture for 2-4 hours before harvesting. Slides were made using standard techniques, treated with Giemsa stain, and examined for tetraploidy. Between 450 and 500 metaphases were examined for each of 23 patients (HCMM/DNS) and 24 controls (spouses). Disease status, age, sex, passage number (representing the length of time that cells were carried in tissue culture), and the percentage of cells exhibiting tetraploidy were recorded. Specimens in which tetraploidy was observed in more than 7% of metaphases were classified as abnormally elevated, in accord with previous studies [24, 25].
Induced Sister Chromatid Exchange Heparinized blood samples were obtained from nine patients (CMM/DNS) and nine controls. The blood was allowed to settle for 1-2 hours, at which time 1 ml of lymphocyte rich plasma was added to 9 ml of Ham's F-12 medium (without thymidine) supplemented with 20% fetal calf serum and 0.1% penicillin and streptomycin. Irradiation was performed with a germicidal lamp emitting predominantly 254 nm UV. A total UV dose of 15 ergs/mm 2 was delivered to the cell suspensions in Petri dishes (100 × 20 mm) at an incident flux of 2.5 ergs/mm2/sec. The suspensions were transferred to plastic flasks (25 cm2), PHA and BrdU (final concentration, 25 Win) added, and the cultures grown in the dark for 72 hours at 37°C. Cells were harvested following a 1-hour treatment with colchicine (0.2 ~g/ml, final concentration) and chromosome preparations were made in a standard manner. Differential staining for the detection of SCEs was accomplished using the method of Goto et al. [26]. Slides were coded, and 30 second-division metaphase cells were analyzed for sister chromatid exchanges (SCE) for each individual, both baseline and following UV treatment.
Statistical Methods Means of assay results from affected patients and controls for the continuous variables were compared using the t-test [27]. A chi-square statistic was used to test for the independent effects of the categorical variables [28J, and a linear regression procedure was used initially to test for the effects of interactions among the variables [29]. In the karyotyped patients, the presence or absence of each type of chromosome aberration was initially treated as a dichotomous variable. A Wilcoxon ranking statistic, using the SAS NPARlWAY procedure [30], was employed to compare the case and control groups after having ranked each patient by percentage of cells with each of the three types of chromosome abnormalities.
302
N. Caporaso et al.
RESULTS Peripheral Blood Karyotypes Of 150 patients eligible for analysis, 33 had CMM (of w h o m 31 also had DN), 32 had DN only, 50 were clinically normal blood relatives and 35 were spouses. These patients were d r a w n from 13 i n d e p e n d e n t m e l a n o m a - p r o n e families. No consistent clonal abnormalities were observed in any patient. Overall, 21% (31/150) of subjects' karyotypes i n c l u d e d at least one cell with a major structural abnormality, 25% (38/150) had minor structural abnormalities, and 33% (50/150) had n u m e r i c a l abnormalities. There were 85 w o m e n and 65 men in the study; in the aggregate the w o m e n had slightly more major structural abnormalities and numerical aberrations, but the m e n had slightly more abnormalities of all type combined. 1 In no instance was the difference statistically significant. Normal family members and spouses did not differ significantly in any of the three categories (Table 1), although spouses had somewhat more numerical abnormalities than normal family members (×2 = 2.94, p = 0.09), whereas, normal family members had slightly more structural abnormalities than spouses (×2 = 1.51, p = .22). Normal family members (mean age, 30.1) were considerably younger than spouse controls (mean age, 46.7). The age difference accounted for the different rates of n u m e r i c a l abnormalities observed in these two control groups. This was expected because the frequency of sex chromosome abnormalities increases with age [31]. Age was not related to structural abnormalities. Accordingly, w h e n considering the presence of any of the three types of aberrations, normal family members and spouses were pooled to simplify comparisons. Pooling the control groups resulted a nearly identical age distributions in cases (mean, 37.8 years) and controls (mean, 36.9 years). The relationship between age and chromosome abnormalities is d e p i c t e d in Figures 1-4. We analyzed the data by family of origin, in order to explore the possibility that a specific family, or subgroup of families, possessed an exceptionally high proportion of i n d i v i d u a l s with abnormal karyotypes, and was thus " d r i v i n g " the association attributed to the group as a whole. We ranked families according to the percentage of i n d i v i d u a l s per family with chromosome abnormalities and on this basis grouped families into three categories of high, intermediate, and low levels. Then we calculated the percentage of both affected and normal patients in each group, for each type of chromosome abnormality. In every category, the percentage of affected i n d i v i d u a l s possessing karyotype abnormalities was greater than the percentage of normals (Table 2). Although the numbers in each subgroup are too small to demonstrate statistical significance, these data suggest that the prevalence of c h r o m o s o m e aberrations in affected individuals is i n d e p e n d e n t of family source. CMM patients and DN patients each showed significant excesses of " c o m b i n e d " chromosomal abnormalities (×2 = 6.02, p = 0.01 and ×2 = 5.29, p -- 0.02, respectively) (Table 3). Major structural abnormalities were increased in both groups, significantly so in the CMM group. Numerical abnormalities were also increased in both groups, but statistical significance was achieved only in the DN group w h e n c o m p a r e d with pooled normals (Table 3). Patients with both m e l a n o m a and DNS did not differ significantly from those with DNS alone. Minor structural abnormalities did not differ significantly among any of the subgroups. Patients were ranked 1Combined abnormalities defined as subjects with cells having either (or both) major structural or numerical abnormalities. This was considered a nominal (dichotomous) variable. Minor structural abnormalities were not included.
85
Pooled normals 37.3
36.9 31
12
11" 8 19 3 9
No.
Major
21
14
33 25 29 9 18
%
38
19
8 11 19 9 10
No.
Structural Minor
25
22
24 34 30 26 20
%
50
21
29 b 12 9
175
12
No.
25
36 49 45 34 19
%
33
Numerical
65
28
19 ° 18 375 13 15
No.
TotaF
43
33
58 56 57 37 30
%
once.~T°talpersons with either major structural, numerical, or both types of cytogenetic abnormalities. Patients with more than one class of abnormality are counted only
bWhen compared with pooled normals, p < 0.01 (chi-square).
aWhen compared with pooled uormals, p < 0.05 (chi-square}.
150
33 32 65 35 50
Melanoma Dysplastic uevi Pooled disease Spouse Normal relation
Total
(yr}
Number
status 40.6 35.0 37.8 46.7 30,1
Mean age
Chromosome abnormalities by type and diagnosis
Subject
Table 1
09
z
C~
t.,0 uJ
o
tr o z <
.50
I I-
.40
NUMERICAL
_J
< D a
.30
t~ z
---4
.20
.10
0
MAJOR STRUCTURAL
I
I
II
III
IV
AGE QUARTILES
Figure 1
The percentage of individuals w i t h a b n o r m a l cells by age quartiles. A trend tow a r d increased numerical abnormalities w i t h age is seen, whereas, no s u c h trend is a p p a r e n t w i t h major structural abnormalities. The age qnartiles b r e a k d o w n is as follows: I, n = 37, range 8-25, m e a n 18.5; II, n = 38, range 26-35, m e a n 29.8; III, n = 36, range 36-49, m e a n 42.6; IV, n = 39, range 50-79, m e a n 57.5. Vertical bars over data points define standard error of the mean. F i g u r e 2 The m e a n percentage of abnormal cells per individual by age quartiles. As in Figure 1, numerical abnormalities increase w i t h age, whereas, major structural abnormalities s h o w no particular trend. The age distribution is the same as in Figure 1. NUMERICAL ' ABNORMALITIES
D
Z
,q, (3
rr"
O Z
,< z<
MAJOR STRUCTURAL ABNORMALITIES
1
L
IV AGE QUARTILES
305
Hereditary CMM and NS
6
POOLED DISEASE
> 5 Z
-~-
5
~
4
o z m <
3
z
POOLED NORMALS
1
0
I
I
I
I
I
II
Ill
IV
AGE QUARTILES F i g u r e 3 The relation between age and n u m e r i c a l abnormalities by breaking d o w n the subjects into p o o l e d controls (spouses and n o r m a l relations) and p o o l e d disease (DNS and C M M / DNS). A trend t o w a r d increasing n u m e r i c a l abnormalities in the highest age quartJles is seen. In a d d i t i o n , the significance of the difference in n u m e r i c a l abnormalities between diseased and n o r m a l is apparent in three of the f o u r quartiles. The age quartiles b r e a k d o w n is as follows: POOLEDDISEASE: I, n = 15, range 10--25, mean 19.6; H, n = 17, range 26-35, mean 30.4; III, n = 16, range 38-49, mean 43.6; IV, n = 17, range 50-75, mean 55.8. POOLEDCONTROLS: I, n = 22, range 8--23, mean 17.8; II, n = 21, range 26 34, mean 29.3, IlI, n = 20, range 36-49, mean 41.9. IV, n = 22, range = 52-79, mean = 58.8.
by the percentage of cells exhibiting each of the three classes of c h r o m o s o m e abnormalities; case and control groups were compared using a Wilcoxon statistic. Results were similar to those found using dichotomous variables, i.e., both the melanoma and DN groups had significantly more abnormalities than pooled controls; n u m eri c a l abnormalities were significantly increased in the DN group (Table 4), whereas, structural abnormalities were significantly increased in the m e l a n o m a group. W h e n all DN patients were analyzed as a group (combining patients with
Table 2
Affected versus controls in high, intermediate, and low c h r o m o s o m e abnormality families Major structural
High Intermediate Low Overall
Numerical
Combined
Normal (%)
Affected (%)
Normal (%)
Affected (%)
Normal (%)
Affected (%)
29 14 5 14
40 50 8 29
47 22 13 25
59 29 21 45
55 36 16 33
81 53 29 57
306
N. C a p o r a s o et el.
D
3
SPOUSES
Z g3 uJ
"~ .<
2
rr
o z rn <
RELATIVES
o~ Z
< ILl
1
J
I
II
J
I
ill
IV
AGE QUARTILES
F i g u r e 4 The control group is divided into spouses and normal relations, illustrating their variation with age. Both groups show increased numerical abnormalities with age. Note that there are no spouses in the youngest age quartile. This figure supports the contention that the difference in mean numerical abnormalities between spouses and normal relations is accounted for by the difference in their respective age distributions. The age quartile breakdown is as follows: NORMALRELATIONS: I, n = 22, range 8-23, mean 17.8; II, n = 12, range 26-33, mean 29.1; III, n = 9, range 36-46, mean 39.4; IV, n = 7, range 52-67, mean 58.4. SPOUSES:I, n = 0; II, n = 9, range 26-34, mean 29.6; III, n = 11, range 36-49, mean 43.8; IV, n - 15, range 52-79, mean = 59.
DN o n l y a n d DN p l u s m e l a n o m a ) , b o t h s t r u c t u r a l a n d n u m e r i c a l a b n o r m a l i t i e s s h o w e d h i g h l y s i g n i f i c a n t i n c r e a s e s c o m p a r e d w i t h c o n t r o l s (Table 4/.
Prophase Banding P r o p h a s e b a n d i n g w a s p e r f o r m e d o n five p a t i e n t s ( r e p r e s e n t i n g five s e p a r a t e f a m i lies) w i t h CMM/DN. All five h a d n o r m a l k a r y o t y p e s .
Tetraploidy F i b r o b l a s t s f r o m 23 f a m i l y m e m b e r s ( r e p r e s e n t i n g 14 s e p a r a t e families) w i t h C M M / DN a n d 24 s p o u s e c o n t r o l s w e r e s t u d i e d . Overall, 13 of t h e 47 f i b r o b l a s t l i n e s rev e a l e d s i g n i f i c a n t t e t r a p l o i d y (greater t h a n 7%). F i v e of 24 (21%) n o r m a l s e x h i b i t e d s i g n i f i c a n t t e t r a p l o i d y , w h e r e a s , e i g h t of 23 C M M / D N (35%) w e r e a b n o r m a l , a diff e r e n c e t h a t w a s n o t s t a t i s t i c a l l y s i g n i f i c a n t (Table 5).
307
Hereditary CMM and NS
Table 3
Summary
of s t a t i s t i c a l c o m p a r i s o n s
various subgroups
made between
of a f f e c t e d f a m i l y m e m b e r s
and
pooled normal study subjects
Pooled normals (n = 85) Major s t r u c t u r a l Xz= p= Numerical X ~= p= Combined b
13% ° --25% --33%
Melanoma (n = 33)
DNS without melanoma (n = 32)
Pooled affecteds (n = 65)
33%
25%
29%
5.59 0.02 36%
1.94 0.16 53%
1.60 0.20 58%
5.13 0.02 45%
8.56 0.003 56%
6.57 0.01 57%
X z=
--
6.02
5.29
8.63
p
--
0.01
0.02
0.003
=
n = Number of individuals in each study group. Percentage of individuals with at least one of the indicated abnormalities. b Combined abnormalities, either major structural or numerical abnormalities.
Table 4
A n a l y s i s of d i s e a s e g r o u p s u s i n g W i l c o x o n ranking statistic
Diagnosis
Major structural
Numerical
z = 2.39 p = 0.02
1.77 0.08
2.80 0.005
z = 1.45 p = 0.16
3.25 0.001
2.81 0.005
z = 2.31 p = 0.02
3.05 0.002
3.44 0.0006
Combined °
Melanoma
Dysplastic nevi
DN p l u s m e | a n o m a b
°Combined abnormalities here refer to the sum of the percentage of cells counted having either major structural, or numerical abnormalities, or both. bIncludes all subjects with either melanoma, or dysplastic nevi, or both.
Table 5
Prevalence
of i n v i t r o
tetraploidy among melanoma/dysplastic
nevus
patients and controls Gro up
N u m b e r > 7%
n
%
Co ntro ls CMM/DN
5 8
24 23
21 35 °
aXZ = 1.14;p = 0.29.
308
N. Caporaso et al.
The percentage of cells in each line exhibiting tetraploidy was then e x a m i n e d as a continuous variable and linear stepwise regression was performed to determine if any of the d e p e n d e n t variables influenced tetraploidy levels significantly. Neither age, sex, passage number, nor disease status were related to tetraploidy. Of all the variables examined, passage n u m b e r was most closely correlated with increased t e t r a p l o i d y (R 2 = 0.059; F = 1.65; p = 0.21), but none of the variables was highly predictive. We also c o m p a r e d mean percent tetraploidy, treating the data as continuous rather than ordinal, using both a t-test, and a Wilcoxon ranking procedure (ordering i n d i v i d u a l s in terms of increasing percentage of cells with tetraploidy); both techniques detected no significant difference between affected and unaffected study subjects. Induced Sister C h r o m a t i d Exchange
The nine CMM/DN patients and nine controls had similar rates of SCE, both on baseline determination and following exposure to UV radiation (Table 6). DISCUSSION
We a p p l i e d various cytogenetic assays to fresh l y m p h o c y t e s and fibroblast cell lines obtained from carefully characterized members of m e l a n o m a - p r o n e families, in order to clarify the pathogenesis of this autosomal d o m i n a n t cancer syndrome. The most striking finding was a significant excess of a p p a r e n t l y r a n d o m c h r o m o s o m e abnormalities in subjects with CMM/DN or DN alone, c o m p a r e d with normal family members and spouses studied at the same time in the same laboratory. Neither age, sex, nor family of origin could account for the abnormalities found. Because significant abnormalities were seen in both the disease groups (CMM and DNS) and because most m e l a n o m a patients had DNS as well, linear stepwise analysis of the data was performed to separate the relative contributions of m e l a n o m a and DN to the abnormalities recorded. The overlap between these two groups was so extensive (i.e., 31 of 33 m e l a n o m a patients also had DN) that the regression technique could not identify a relationship between CMM and the cytogenetic abnormalities that was i n d e p e n d e n t of that identified for DN. The similarity between dysplastic nevi patients who have or have not d e v e l o p e d m e l a n o m a provides further support for the strong relationship between these two conditions [11, 15]. We identified no specific, consistent, clonal cytogenetic abnormality in persons with or at high risk of hereditary melanoma. These data suggest that a chromosomal instability disorder resembling that seen in Bloom's s y n d r o m e [32] or F a n c o n i ' s anemia [33] may be present in high-risk i n d i v i d u a l s from m e l a n o m a - p r o n e families.
Table 6
Baseline and post-UV sister c h r o m a t i d exchange in m e l a n o m a / d y s p l a s t i c nevus patients and controls SCE/cell (_+ SD)
Diagnosis
n
Baseline
Post-UV challenge
Normal CMM/DNS
8 9
14.3 (+ 2.66) 13.0 (+ 0.87)
17.0 (+ 1.79) 16.5 (+ 1.92)
°t-Test, p > 0.05.
Hereditary CMM and NS
309
Such an abnormality might contribute to a mutagenic or carcinogenic event if the chromosomes in CMM/DN patients were unusually susceptible to injury by environmental carcinogens. Considerable data suggest that normal fibroblasts and Ebstein-Barr virus transformed peripheral blood lymphocytes from CMM/DNS patients are unusually sensitive to the cytotoxic and mutagenic effects of both UV radiation [13, 34-36] and the UV-mimetic chemical carcinogen 4-nitroquinoline-1oxide [12, 36]. The possibility that these cytogenetic abnormalities reported here represent indirect evidence of a chromosomal instability syndrome is also consistent with the recent observation that fibroblasts from CMM/DN patients show a significant excess of chromosome gaps and breaks following exposure to ionizing radiation during G2 of the cell cycle [14]. It must be emphasized that the standard karyotype analyses performed in the current survey provide no direct link between environmental carcinogens and the cytogenetic abnormalities detected. Such a hypothesis will require further study employing methods designed specifically to test such a model. Danes et al. have reported that cells cultured from dermal skin biopsies from family members with or at risk of certain heritable cancer syndromes reveal in vitro alterations in chromosome number, which apparently distinguish affected from unaffected members of the same kindreds [24]. Tetraploidy in cultured skin fibroblasts was reported to be increased in affected patients with Gardners' syndrome but not in familial polyposis coli [37-40], and in normal persons with a family history of cancer [41]. They proposed that increased tetraploidy occurred in those epithelial tissues that are at increased risk of malignant transformation. More recently, these investigators have reported an increase in chromosome number, "in vitro hyperdiploidy," in familial breast cancer patients and their high-risk female relatives [25], and in patients with familial malignant melanoma [42]. In the melanoma study, increased hyperdiploidy occurred in dermal monolayer cultures from four of four affecteds, two of 14 high-risk family members, and none of four spouses. It is not clear to what extent tetraploidy accounted for the hyperdiploidy observed in this series. We determined tetraploidy levels on 47 patients and controls, and found no significant correlation with sex, age, number of passages in cell culture, or disease status. Using standard fibroblast cell lines, and considering age, sex, passage number, and disease status, we found no difference in the prevalence of tetraploidy among the cells of CMM/DN patients compared with simultaneously tested controls. Overall, the levels of tetraploidy were high compared with those reported elsewhere [43, 44]. This may be due to differences in technique or other nonspecific or unknown factors [45]. An analysis of the 14 kindreds from which these subjects were chosen showed no excess of nonmelanoma cancers, thus, family cancer history is not a likely explanation [46]. Slides from 34 subjects were also examined to determine if hyperdiploidy exclusive of tetraploidy contributed to observed polyploidy. Of the 218 polyploid ceils counted, only six (3%) had a chromosome number less than 86 (Table 7). Thus nontetraploid hyperdiploidy did not contribute significantly to polyploidy in fibroblasts in either cases or controls in our series. SCE is the reciprocal interchange of DNA between chromatids, which is visualized after differential staining in chromatids substituted with BrdU [47]. It is considered a sensitive indicator of chromosome damage and the clastogenicity of various physical and chemical agents [48]. Consistently elevated levels of SCE have been demonstrated in lymphocytes and fibroblasts from Bloom's syndrome patients [49, 50]. Normal frequencies of SCE are found in cells heterozygous for the Bloom's syndrome gene, and also in cells either homozygous or heterozygous for ataxia telangiectasia [51], Fanconi's anemia [52], and xeroderma pigmentosum [53], other
•. Caporaso et al.
310
Table 7 Distribution of chromosome number in polyploid cells in skin fibroblast cell cultures Chromosome number
<86
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
Total
N o r m a l s (n ~ 15) C M M / D N S (n - 19) T o t a l c e l l s (n - 34)
4 2 6
2 0 2
1 7 8
4 2 6
5 14 19
10 27 37
17 20 37
31 51 82
7 11 18
1 2 3
82 136 218
n
n u m b e r af individuals in each group.
disorders characterized by chromosomal instability. Thus, the chromosome instability syndromes [54-56], with the notable exception of Bloom's syndrome [57, 58], demonstrate normal SCE levels. Overall, there is not a consistent correlation of SCE levels and chromosome aberrations in human malignant disease [59]. Studies of SCE and melanoma have not revealed consistent abnormalities [6062]. Ramsay reported that spontaneous and UV light-induced SCE frequencies were similar in high-risk members of two melanoma families and controls [34]. In our study we found no indication of baseline or UV-induced SCE abnormalities in HCMM/DN. We have also recently failed to find significant differences in either baseline or stimulated (4-NQO, mitomycin-C, MNNG) SCE in six additional CMM/ DN patients compared with six controls [63]. The lack of SCE abnormalities may not be surprising because the other chromosome instability syndromes with the exception noted above, have normal SCE levels. In addition, it is apparent that SCE show wide variability in sensitivity to different environmental insults, disease states, therapies employed, and tissues tested (e.g., fibroblasts versus lymphocytes). Various changes in experimental design can be envisioned that might reveal SCE abnormalities, e.g., employing fibroblasts instead of peripheral blood lymphocytes, using UV-B rather than UV-C irradiation, testing nevus or tumor tissue, controlling for smoking, or using greater numbers of samples to increase the power of the test. The range of chromosome abnormalities linked with specific tumors and increased risk of tumors is quite broad. At one extreme are highly specific abnormalities generally involving malignant cells only (i.e., Philadelphia chromosome in CML), which contrasts with seemingly random, constitutional abnormalities of the chromosome instability disorders. The constitutional abnormalities described here in melanoma-prone family members resemble the latter type. However, direct studies of melanoma tissue have suggested that nonrandom chromosome abnormalities occur [64], although no uniform, precisely delineated specific lesion has been identified as a characteristic of all melanoma tumor cells [65]. One mechanism of chromosome damage that might encompass both general types of chromosome injury is breakage, which preferentially involves fragile sites. An association between the human fragile sites and the specific sites of chromosome rearrangement characteristic of a number of different tumors has been postulated [66, 67]. One possible explanation for a "chromosome instability" pattern of nonspecific defects such as that seen in our families may be an abnormality of chromosome fragile sites. Such a mechanism could explain the seeming paradox of the occurrence of site-specific cancer excesses in chromosomal instability disorders, which have been considered conditions in which chromosome breaks are random [69, 70]. That is, the apparent random nature of these cytogenetic lesions may have as its basis multiple specific sites of damage (i.e., the fragile sites). Direct cytogenetic studies of melanoma tissue have revealed various nonrandom changes, particularly of chromosomes #1, #2, #3, #6, and #7 [64, 71,721. Linkage analysis of the same families whose cytogenetic studies are summarized above has suggested that a familial melanoma susceptibility gene may be located on the short
Hereditary CMM and NS
311
arm of chromosome #1, near the Rh blood group locus [18]. The gene controlling expression of the m e l a n o m a tumor antigen p97 has been tentatively mapped to chromosome #3, near the transferrin receptor [73]. Some investigators have suggested linkage between the familial m e l a n o m a gene and the major histocompatibility complex on chromosome #6, although evidence from a recent linkage analysis study appears to refute this hypothesis [74]. In spite of these clues regarding specific chromosome segments that might be involved in the origin of melanoma, neither standard nor extended cytogenetic studies have revealed consistent or clonal defects in persons with or at high risk of melanoma. Rather, our data and those of others [35] suggest a complex interplay of multiple genetic, cellular (? metabolic), cytogenetic and e n v i r o n m e n t a l factors in the pathogenesis of familial melanoma. The "chromosomal instability" pattern described herein is compatible with either enhanced susceptibility to DNA damage from e n v i r o n m e n t a l carcinogens or abnormal repair of such injury. Previous studies of these families provide precedent for both hypotheses. Additional research is required to clarify our u n d e r s t a n d i n g of the neoplastic process in hereditary CMM, and to determine if this pattern of cytogenetic abnormalities is specific for hereditary CMM, DNS, or m e l a n o m a patients in general. Supported by NIH contracts N01-CP-21021, N01-CP-21037, and N01-CP-21031. The authors thank Dr. Uta Francke for conducting the extended chromosome studies; Drs. Kenneth H. Kraemer and Peter Kohn for performing the sister chromatid exchange assays; and Drs. Jacqueline Whang-Peng, Gloria Balaban, and Sherri Bale for helpful comments on this manuscript.
REFERENCES
1. Norris W (1820): A case of fungoid disease. Edinb Med Surg J16:562-565. 2. Cowley EP (1952): Genetic aspects of malignant melanoma. AMA Arch Dermatol 65:440450. 3. Clark WH Jr, Reimer RR, Greene MH, Ainsworth AM, Mastrangelo MJ (1978): Origin of familial melanoma from heritable melanocytic lesions: The B-K mole syndrome. Arch Dermatol 114:732-738. 4. Reimer RR, Clark WH, Greene MH, Ainsworth A, Fraumeni Jr, JF (1978): Precursor lesions in familial melanoma: A new genetic preneoplastic syndrome. J Am Med Assoc 239:744746. 5. Greene MH, Fraumeni Jr, JF (1979): The hereditary variant of malignant melanoma. In: Human Malignant Melanoma, WH Clark, Jr, LI Goldman, MJ Mastrangelo, eds. Grune and Stratton, NY, pp. 136-166. 6. Greene MH, Reimer RR, Clark, Jr WH, Mastrangelo MJ (1978): Precursor lesions in familial melanoma. Semin Oncol 5:85-87. 7. Tucker MA, Greene MH, Clark WH Jr, Kraemer KH, Fraser MC, Elder DE (1983): Dysplastic nevi on the scalp of prepubertal children from melanoma-prone families. J Pediatrics 103:65 69. 8. Greene MH (1984): Dysplastic nevus syndrome. Hospital Practice 19:91-108. 9. Greene MH, Clark WH Jr, Tucker MA, Eider DE, Kraemer KH, Guerry D IV, Witmer WK, Thompson J, Matozeo I, Fraser MC (1985): Acquired precursors of cutaneous malignant melanoma. N Engl J Med 312:91-97. 10. Clark, Jr WH, Elder DE, Guerry D, Epstein MN, Greene MH, Van Horn M (1984): A study of tumor progression The procursor lesions of superficial spreading and nodular melanoma. Hum Pathol 15:1147-1165. 11. Greene MH, Clark, Jr WH, Tucker MA, Kraemer KH, Elder DE, Fraser MC (1985): High risk of malignant melanoma in melanoma-prone families with dysplastic nevi. Ann Intern Med 102:458 465.
312
N. C a p o r a s o et al.
12. Smith PJ, Greene MH, Adams D, Paterson MC (1983): Normal responses to the carcinogen 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide of cultured fibroblasts from patients with dysplastic nevus syndrome and hereditary cutaneous malignant melanoma. Carcinogenesis 4:911-916. 13. Smith PJ, Greene MH, Devlin DA, McKeen EA, Paterson MC (1982): Abnormal sensitivity to UV-radiation in cultured skin fibroblasts from patients with hereditary cutaneous malignant melanoma and dysplastic nevus syndrome. Intl J Cancer 30:39-45. 14. Sanford KK, Parshad R, Greene MH (1984): G2 chromosomal radiosensitivity of skin fibroblasts from patients with hereditary cutaneous malignant melanoma and dysplastic nevus syndrome. In Vitro 20:247-248. 15. Bale SJ, Chakravarti A, Greene MH (1986): Cutaneous malignant melanoma and familial dysplastic nevi: Evidence for autosomal dominance and pleiotropy, Am J Human Genet 38:188-196. 16. Greene MH, Bale SJ (1986): Genetic aspects of cutaneous malignant melanoma. Rec Results Cancer Res (in press) 17. Greene MH (1985): Laboratory studies in patients with hereditary cutaneous malignant melanoma and dysplastic nevus syndrome. In: Pathobiology of Malignant Melanoma, DE Elder, ed. Karger Publisher, Basel. 18. Greene MH, Goldin LR, Clark WH Jr, Lovrien E, Kraemer KH, Tucker MA, Elder DE, Fraser MC, Rowe S (1983): Familial cutaneous malinant melanoma: Autosomal dominant trait possibly linked to the Rh locus. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 80:6071-6075. 19. Blattner WA (1977): Family studies--The interdisciplinary approach. In: Genetics of Hu~ man Cancer, JJ Mulvihill, RW Miller, JF Fraumeni, Jr., eds. Raven Press, NY, pp. 269-280. 20. Seabright M (1971): Rapid banding technique for h u m a n chromosomes. Lancet ii: 971972. 21. Whang-Peng J, Leventhal DG, Adamson JW, Perry S (1969): The effect of daunomycin on h u m a n cells in vivo and in vitro. Cancer 23:113-121. 22. Wurster-Hill D, Whang-Peng J, McIntyre OR, Hsu LYF, Hirshhorn K, Modan B (1976): Cytogenetic studies in polycythemia vera. In: Cytogenetic Studies. Grune and Stratton, NY, pp. 123-140. 23. Francke U, Oliver N (1978): Quantitative analysis of high-resolution trypsin-Giemsa bands on h u m a n prametaphase chromosomes. Hum Genet 45:137-65. 24. Danes BS (1981): Occurrence of in vitro tetraploidy in the heritable colon cancer syndrome. Cancer 48:1596-1601. 25. Lynch HT, Albano WA, Danes BS, Layton MA, Kimberling WJ, Lynch JF (1984): Genetic predisposition to breast cancer. Cancer 53:612-622. 26. Goto K, Akematsu T, Shimazu H, Sugiyama T (1975): Simple differential giemsa staining of sister chromatids after treatment with photosensitive dyes and exposures to light and the mechanism of staining. Chromosoma 53:233-230. 27. SAS Institute, Inc. (1982): The btest procedure. In: SAS Users Guide: Statistics. SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC, pp. 217-221. 28. SAS Institute, Inc. (1982): The FREQ procedure. In: SAS User's Guide: Basics. SAS Institute Inc., Cary NC, pp. 513-525. 29. SAS Institute, Inc. (1982): The FUNCAT procedure. In: SAS User's Guide: Statistics. SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC, pp. 101-110, 157-186. 30. SAS Institute, Inc. (1982): The Npariway procedure. In: SAS Users Guide: Statistics. SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC, pp. 205-216. 31. Nakagome Y, Abe T, Misawa S, Takeshita T, Iinuma K (1984): The "loss" of centromeres from chromosomes of aged women. Am J Hum Genet 36:398-404. 32. Hoehn H, Salk D (1984): Clonal analysis of stable chromosome rearrangements in Bloom's syndrome fibroblasts. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 11:405-415. 33. Hayashi K, Schamid W (1975): The rate of SCE parallel to spontaneous chromosome breakage in Fanconi anemia and trenimon-induced aberration in h u m a n lymphocytes and fibroblasts. Hum Genet 29:201-206. 34. Ramsay RG, Chen P, Imray FP, Kidson C, Lavin MF, Hockey A (1982): Familial melanoma associated with dominant ultraviolet radiation. Cancer Res 42:2902-2912. 35. Perera MIR, Greene MH, Kraemer KH (1983): Dysplastic nevus syndrome-increased ultra-
Hereditary CMM and NS
36.
37. 38. 39. 40.
41. 42.
43. 44.
45. 46.
47. 48. 49. 50. 51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56. 57.
313
violet mutability in association with increased melanoma susceptibility. Clin Res 31:595A. Howell JN, Greene MH, Corner RC, Maher VM, McCormick JJ (1984): Fibroblasts from patients with hereditary cutaneous malignant melanoma are abnormally sensitive to the mutagenic effects of simulated sunlight and 4-nitroquinoline-1 oxide. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 81:1179-1183. Danes BS (1976): The Gardner syndrome--Increased tetraploidy in cultured skin fibroblast. J Med Genet 13:52-56. Danes BS (1976): Increased tetraploidy--Cell specific for the Gardner gene in the cultured cell. Cancer 38:1983-1988. Danes BS (1978): Increased in vitro tetraploidy: Tissue specific within the heritable colorectal cancer syndromes with polyposis coli. Cancer 41:2330-2334. Danes BS, Ahn T, Veale AMO (1980): Modifying alledes in the heritable colorectal cancer syndromes with polyps. In: Colorectal Cancer: Prevention, Epidemiology, and Screening. S Winawer, D Schottenfeld, D Sherlock, eds. Raven Press, NY, pp. 73-81. Danes BS, Lynch HT (1983): Increased in vitro tetraploidy in dermal monolayer cultures derived from normals. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 8:81-87. Lynch HT, Fusaro RM, Danes BS, Kimberling WJ, Lynch JF (1983): A review of hereditary malignant melanoma including biomarkers in familial atypical multiple mole melanoma syndrome. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 8:325 358. Danes BS, Deschner EE (1984): Detection of in vitro tetraploidy in heritable colon cancer syndrome. Cancer 54:1353-1359. Delhanty JDA, Davis MB, Wood I (1983): Chromosome instability in lymphocytes, fibroblasts and colon epitheliaMike cells from patients with familial polyposis coli. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 8:27-50. Danes BS (1985): Long-term-cultured colon epithelial cell lines from individuals with and without colon cancer genotypes. J Natl Cancer Inst 75:2:261-267. Greene MH, Clark WH Jr, Tucker MA, Kraemer KH, Eider DE, Fraser MC (1985): Hereditary melanoma and the dysplastic naevus syndrome: The risk of cancer other than melanoma. Lancet (submitted) Carrano AV, Thompson LH, Lindl PA, and Minkler JL (1978): Sister chromatid exchange as an indicator of mutagenesis. Nature 271:551-553. Kato H (1974): Induction of sister chromatid exchanges by chemical mutagens and its possible relevance to DNA repair. Exp Cell Res 85:239-247 Shiraishi Y, Sandberg AA (1977): The relationship between sister chromatid exchanges and chromosome abnormalities in Bloom's syndrome. Cytogenet Cell Genet 18:13-23. Shiraishi Y, Freeman AL, Sandberg AA (1976): Increased sister chromatid exchange in bone marrow and blood from Bloom's syndrome. Cytogenet Cell Genet 17:162-173. Galloway SM, Evans H (1975): Sister chromatid exchange in h u m a n chromosomes from normal individuals and patients with ataxia telangiectasia. Cytogenet Cell Genet 15: 17-29. Latt SA, Stetten G, Juergens LA, Buchman GR, Gerald PS (1975): Induction by alkylating agents of sister chromatid exchanges and chromatid exchanges and chromatid breaks in Fanconi's anemia. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 72:4066-4070. Wolff S, Bodycote J, Thomas GH, Cleaver JF (1975): Sister chromatid exchange in xeroderma pigmentosa cells that are defective in DNA excision-repair or post-replication repair. Genetics 81:349 355. Deweerd-Kasterlein EA, Keijzer W, Rainaldi G, Bootsma D (1977): Induction of sister chromatid exchanges in xeroderma pigmentosum cells after exposure to ultraviolet light. Mutagen Res 45:253-261. Cohen MM, Fruchtman CE, Simpson SJ, Boughman JA (1983): Chemical clastogenicity in lymphoid cell lines of chromosome instability syndrome. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 10:267276. Sperling K, Wegner RD, Riehm H, Obe G (1975): Frequency and distribution of sister chromatid exchanges in a case of Fanconi's anemia. Human Genet 27:227-230. Schonburg S, German J (1980): Sister chromatid exchange in cells metabolically coupled to Bloom's svndrome cells. Nature 284:72-74.
314
N. C a p o r a s o et al.
58. Chaganti, Schonberg S, German J (1974): A manyfold increase in sister chromatid exchanges in Bloom's syndrome lymphocytes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 71:4508-4512. 59. Shiraishi Y, Sandberg AA (1980): Sister chromatid exchange in h u m a n chromosomes, including observations in neoplasia. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 1:363-380. 60. Ghidoni A, Privitera E, Raimondi E, Rovini D, Illeni MT, Cascinelli N (1983): Malignant melanoma: Sister chromatid exchange analysis in three families. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 9:347-354. 61. Privatera E, Ghidoni A, Raimond E, Rovini D, Illeni MT, Cascinelli N (1985): Sister chromatid exchange and proliferation pattern in stimulated lymphocytes of cutaneous malignant melanoma patients. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 15:37-45. 62. Wind-Shaw C, Mulvihill JJ, Greene MH, Pickle LW, Tsai S, Whang-Peng J (1979): Sister chromatid exchange and chromosomes in chronic myelogenous leukemia and cancer families. Intl J Cancer 23:8-13. 63. Ivett J, Parry D, Greene MH: Unpublished observations. 64. Wong N (1986): Non-random chromosome structural aberrations and oncogene loci in h u m a n malignant melanoma. Cancer Genet Cytogenet (in press) 65. Yunis JJ (1983): The chromosomal basis of h u m a n neoplasia. Science 226:227-236. 66. Hecht F, Sutherland GR (1984): Fragile sites and cancer breakpoints. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 12:179-181. 67. Yunis JJ (1984): Fragile sites and predisposition to leukemia and lymphoma. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 12:85-88. 68. Yunis JJ, Sureng AL (1984): Constitutive fragile sites and cancer. Science 226:1199-1204. 69. Sandberg AA (1983): A chromosomal hypothesis of oncogenesis. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 8:277-285. 70. Feinberg AP, Coffey DS (1982): Organ site specificity for cancer in chromosomal instability disorders. Cancer Res 42:3252-3254. 71. Balaban G, Heryln M, Guerry D IV, Bartolo R, Koprowski H, Clark WH, Nowell PC (1984): Cytogenetics of h u m a n malignant melanoma and premalignant lesions. Cancer Genet Cytogenet 11:429 439. 72. Becher R, Gibas Z, Karakousis G, Sandberg A (1983): Non-random chromosome changes in malignant melanoma. Cancer Res 43:5010-5016. 73. Plowman GD, Brown JP, Enns CA, Schroder J, Nikinmag B, Sussmon HH (1983): Assignment of the gene for h u m a n melanoma-associated antigen p97 to chromosome 3. Nature 303:70-72. 74. Bale SJ, Greene MH, Murray C, Goldin LR, Johnson AH, Mann D (1985): Hereditary malignant melanoma is not linked to the HLA complex on chromosome 6. Intl J Cancer 36: 439-443.