Title of article
Sister chromatid exchange frequency in B-cells stimulated by TPA in chronic lymphocytic leukemia
Author/Authors
?ztürk، نويسنده , , ?ükrü and Palanduz، نويسنده , , Sukru and Aktan، نويسنده , , Melih and Cefle، نويسنده , , K?vanç and Serakinci، نويسنده , , Nedime and Perkçelen، نويسنده , , Yüksel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
3
From page
49
To page
51
Abstract
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterised by the clonal proliferation and accumulation of neoplastic B-lymphocytes. The median age of the patients is 65 years, and more men than women are affected. The overwhelming majority of CLLs are of B-cell origin. Chromosomal aberrations have been detected in more than 50% of the B-cells obtained from peripheral blood samples after appropriate stimulation with polyclonal B-cell mitogens. The analysis of sister chromatid exchange is a cytogenetic technique used to show DNA damage due to an exchange of DNA fragments between sister chromatids. In this study, lymphocytes from 22 patients with CLL-B (7 female, 15 male; mean age 64.09 ± 7.56 years) were stimulated by a B-cell mitogen (TPA) and BrdU added at the 24 h of the culture. Metaphase chromosomes were stained with a fluorescence plus Giemsa technique after a standard harvest procedure. The frequency of sister chromatid exchange was found to be increased significantly P = .02) in patients with CLL-B (8.24 ± 1.36 per metaphase) compared to controls (7.25 ± 1.42 per metaphase). We conclude that the increased frequency of sister chromatid exchange in chronic lymphocytic leukemia after stimulation with a B-cell mitogen (TPA) may reflect DNA instability and defective DNA repair in these patients.
Journal title
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics
Record number
1823235
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