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Title: Differential amplification, assembly, and relocation of multiple DNA sequences in human neuroblastomas and neuroblastoma cell lines. Author: Shiloh Y, Shipley J, Brodeur GM, Bruns G, Korf B, Donlon T, Schreck RR, Seeger R, Sakai K, Latt SA. Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A; 1985 Jun; 82(11):3761-5. PubMed ID: 3858848. Abstract: DNA amplification, manifested by homogeneously staining regions in chromosomes and by extrachromosomal, double minute bodies, is characteristic of many neuroblastoma cell lines. Sequences recruited from a specific domain on the short arm of chromosome 2 (2p) are amplified in advanced-stage primary neuroblastomas, whereas sequences from distinctly different regions of 2p are amplified in the neuroblastoma cell line IMR-32. Five different DNA segments, which include the oncogene N-myc, three other fragments derived from the homogeneously staining region of the neuroblastoma cell line IMR-32, and a fifth fragment, derived from the neuroblastoma cell line NB-9, showed differential and variable amplification in 24 advanced-stage neuroblastoma tumors out of 112 tested specimens. All five fragments were mapped within the chromosomal region 2p23-2p25 by three different approaches. However, eight other fragments cloned from the homogeneously staining region of IMR-32 cells, which were not amplified in the tumor tissues examined, were mapped to two more proximal domains of 2p, thousands of kilobases apart from each other and from the chromosomal domain that is amplified in the tumors. These results establish the amplification, to different degrees, of a variable-sized segment of one domain near the terminus of 2p in advanced neuroblastomas. These tumors might ultimately be distinguished according to the pattern of amplification of DNA segments within this domain. The data presented also indicate the existence of a new and complex amplification mechanism in at least one neuroblastoma cell line (IMR-32), which involves not only relocation of DNA from specific genomic domains but also the formation of novel units by splicing together very distant DNA segments.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]