SPONTANEOUS ABNORMALITIES IN NORMAL FIBROBLASTS FROM PATIENTS WITH LI-FRAUMENI CANCER SYNDROME - ANEUPLOIDY AND IMMORTALIZATION

  • 15 December 1990
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 50 (24), 7979-7984
Abstract
Families of patients with the Li-Fraumeni cancer syndrome have an inherited pattern of sarcomas and various other types of cancers that follow a dominant mode of transmission, an early age of onset, and exhibit multiple primary tumors. As soft tissue sarcomas (including fibrosarcomas) are frequently observed with this syndrome, the in vitro growth characteristics of fibroblasts derived from skin biopsies of Li-Fraumeni syndrome patients were studied. Control fibroblasts maintained a normal morphology and eventually senesced in culture. Fibroblasts from seven of eight affected individuals developed changes in morphology, anchorage-independent growth and chromosomal abnormalities. In a fashion similar to that of fibroblasts from normal donors they underwent a growth crisis during which their growth was slow, but they continued to grow past the point at which control samples had stopped dividing (35 population doublings). Fibroblasts from Li-Fraumeni cancer patients escape senescence, growing well beyond 35 population doublings with growth rates similar to early-passage cells. Patient fibroblasts maintain the morphology of a transformed cell but remained nontumorigenic in nude mice. These observations of the behavior of fibroblasts form patients with the Li-Fraumeni syndrome may have predictive value for the determination of gene carriers within these families who are at high risk of cancer.