Clinically nonfunctioning pituitary tumors are monoclonal in origin

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Abstract

Clinically nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas are benign neoplasms comprising ∼ 25-30% of pituitary tumors. Little is known about the pathogenesis of pituitary neoplasia. Clonal analysis allows one to make the important distinction between a polyclonal proliferation in response to a stimulatory factor versus a monoclonal expansion of a genetically aberrant cell. We investigated the clonal origin of pituitary tumors using X-linked restriction fragment length polymorphisms at the phosphoglycerate kinase and hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl-transferase genes. Restriction enzymes were used to distinguish maternal and paternal X-chromosomes, and combined with a methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme to analyze allelic X-inactivation patterns in six pituitary adenomas. All six tumors showed a monoclonal pattern of X-inactivation. These data indicate that nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas are unicellular in origin, a result consistent with the hypothesis that this tumor type is due to somatic mutation.

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Alexander, J. M., Biller, B. M. K., Bikkal, H., Zervas, N. T., Arnold, A., & Klibanski, A. (1990). Clinically nonfunctioning pituitary tumors are monoclonal in origin. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 86(1), 336–340. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci114705

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