Publication: Genetic investigation of nodal melanocytic nevi in cases of giant congenital melanocytic nevus
Authors
Cao, Y. ; Yang, X. ; Lai, Y. M. ; Jia, L. ; Diao, T. ; Zhuang, Q. ; Lin, D. M.
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Publisher
Universidad de Murcia, Departamento de Biologia Celular e Histiologia
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.14670/HH-18-243
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Nodal melanocytic nevi are common
incidental findings in lymph nodes that have been
removed during sentinel lymph node biopsy for
melanoma. They can also occur in the local lymph nodes
of the giant congenital nevus (GCN), but very little is
known regarding nodal melanocytic nevi in the giant
congenital nevus, especially at the genetic level. There
are two theories that explain the possible pathogenesis of
nodal melanocytic nevi, mechanical transport and
arrested migration during embryogenesis. However,
there have been few tests of these two theories at the
molecular biology level until now. We used whole-exon
sequencing to test these two theories at the gene level for
the first time.
In clonal evolution analysis of patient 1, whose
tumor mutation burden (TMB) value was relatively
stable, showed that the GCN and nodal nevus had the
same initial origin and then diverged into two branches
as a result of gene mutations. In contrast, analysis
indicated that in the other patient, whose TMB value
declined from 68.02/Mb in a GCN to 17.55/Mb in
associated nodal nevi, these two samples were from
different origins at the beginning, each with its own gene
mutation. These results are consistent with the two
respective theories at the molecular biological level.
We provided the first tests of the two theories of
pathogenesis of nodal melanocytic nevi at the gene level,
and these findings may provide some clues for further
study. In addition, not all nodal nevi should be treated as
lymph node metastasis in clinical diagnosis, and we
should make a comprehensive assessment and judgment
of nodal melanocytic nevi based on morphology,
immunological characteristics and fluorescence in situ
hybridization (FISH) tests.
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Citation
Histology and Histopathology Vol. 35, nº10 (2020)
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