A possible association of hematologic malignancy with hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer reported in the literature, together with a report that MSH2-deficient mice are susceptible to malignant lymphoma, strongly supports the finding that this patient's lymphoma was related to hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer.
The hMSH2 transcript was present in all cases of lymphoma, while the expression of hMLH1 and hPMS1 was significantly low in some large B-cell lymphomas (four and five out of 14 cases, respectively) and in mantle cell lymphomas of the blastoid type (two out of two cases).
Café-au-lait spots with early onset colorectal neoplasia may identify families with a variant of HNPCC characterized by oligopolyposis, glioblastoma at young age, and lymphoma.
A high level of microsatellite instability was associated with histological transformation of two cases of FCL, but no mutations of the hMLH1 and hMSH2 genes were detected in any of the lymphoma samples.
To determine if the lymphomas these mice develop are related to a particular subtype of human lymphoma we evaluated 20 clinically ill homozygous MSH2-/- mice ranging in age from 2 to 13 months.