Molecular analysis of clonality in Kaposi's sarcoma.

E Delabesse, E Oksenhendler, C Lebbé… - Journal of clinical …, 1997 - jcp.bmj.com
E Delabesse, E Oksenhendler, C Lebbé, O Vérola, B Varet, AG Turhan
Journal of clinical pathology, 1997jcp.bmj.com
BACKGROUND: Kaposi's sarcoma is considered to be an angioproliferative disease
associated with a novel herpesvirus (KSHV/HHV8), but the precise pathophysiology of the
lesion remains unclear. The study of clonality in Kaposi's sarcoma using X linked DNA
polymorphism has been difficult so far, because of a very strong prevalence of the disease in
males. AIMS: To study the clonality of Kaposi's sarcoma lesions. METHODS: An assay
based on a methyl sensitive restriction digest followed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) …
BACKGROUND
Kaposi's sarcoma is considered to be an angioproliferative disease associated with a novel herpesvirus (KSHV/HHV8), but the precise pathophysiology of the lesion remains unclear. The study of clonality in Kaposi's sarcoma using X linked DNA polymorphism has been difficult so far, because of a very strong prevalence of the disease in males.
AIMS
To study the clonality of Kaposi's sarcoma lesions.
METHODS
An assay based on a methyl sensitive restriction digest followed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of the highly polymorphic human androgen receptor (HUMARA) gene was used. Tissues from Kaposi's sarcoma lesions and control tissues from the same patients were obtained from seven females, four with classic Kaposi's sarcoma and three with AIDS associated Kaposi's sarcoma. A cutaneous angiosarcoma was also analysed, for comparative purposes, and showed evidence of clonality after HpaII digestion.
RESULTS
All patients were heterozygous for the HUMARA polymorphism and informative for analysis. In all patients, including four with a nodular form of Kaposi's sarcoma and more than 70% spindle cells in the lesion, a polyclonal pattern of inactivation could be demonstrated.
CONCLUSIONS
The Kaposi's sarcoma lesion is first of all a polyclonal cell proliferation.
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