













|
|
Jerrold M. Ward,Lekidelu Tadesse-Heath,Susan N. Perkins,Sisir K. Chattopadhyay,
Stephen D. Hursting, and Herbert C. Morse III
|
| |
Veterinary
and Tumor Pathology Section (JMW), Animal Sciences Branch, Office of Laboratory
Animal Resources and Laboratory of Nutritional and Molecular Regulation
(SNP), Division of Basic Sciences, National Cancer Institute, Frederick,
Maryland; Laboratory of Immunopathology (LT-H, SKC, HCM), National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda,
Maryland; and University of Texas (SDH), M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston,
Texas |
| |
The molecular pathology and histogenesis of lymphomas in 56 retired breeder
male and 14 12-week-old male homozygous p53-deficient (p53-/-) mice (C57BL/6TacfBR-[KO]p53
N4) were evaluated. Lymphomas were assessed by serial morphologic techniques,
immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, and analysis of T cell receptor
(TCR) or immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) gene rearrangements. We found
two common types of lymphomas. T-cell lymphomas arose in the thymus through
a sequence of lymphocyte depletion, medullary hyperplasia, and unilateral
lymphoma. Tumor cells were CD3+, CD90+, and usually TCR(alpha)/(beta)+
and possessed clonal TCR(beta) gene rearrangements. Thymic lymphoblastic
lymphomas (LL) were highly malignant and quickly metastasized to the splenic
white pulp and liver, even when the thymus was only slightly increased
in weight. In the spleen, a novel lymphoma was found. Marginal zone hyperplasia
led to marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), a well-differentiated lymphoma that
usually expressed CD45R (B220) and CD5 at low levels and that had clonal
IgH gene rearrangements. IgH gene rearrangements were also seen in spleens
with marginal zone hyperplasias only. Hyperplastic and neoplastic marginal
zone B cells expressed IgM at low to normal levels, as seen by FACS analysis
and immunohistochemistry. These tumors only metastasized to the liver
at a later stage, as they became less differentiated. Several mice had
both types of tumors present in the spleen. Two B-cell lymphoblastic lymphomas
of uncertain origin were also found. In this article, we discuss the possible
mechanisms responsible for development of the lymphomas seen in these
p53-deficient mice. (Lab Invest 1999, 79:3-14).
|