Uterine leiomyomas are benign tumors that arise clonally from smooth muscle cells of the myometrium. Cytogenetic studies of uterine leiomyomas have shown that about 40% have chromosome abnormalities and that deletion of 7q is a common finding. The observations suggest the possible location of a growth-suppressor gene within the 7q21-q22 region. Molecular genetic analysis of cytogenetically normal tumors has frequently shown somatic loss of specific tumor suppressor genes detected by loss of heterozygosity in the critical region. To test the hypothesis that chromosome region 7q21-q22 contains a growth-suppressor gene involved in the development of leiomyomas, we examined 92 leiomyomas for allelic loss of 7q markers spanning the cytogenetically defined critical region. Forty tumors with cytogenetically defined 7q deletion, 45 tumors without cytogenetically visible 7q deletion, and seven tumors with no cytogenetic information were examined for allelic loss of loci D7S489, D7S440, D7S492, D7S518, D7S471, D7S466, and D7S530. Loss of heterozygosity for one or more of these loci was observed in 23 of 40 (57.5%) of the tumors with deletion of 7q and in 2 of 45 cases without a cytogenetically visible deletion. The tumors with cytogenetic deletion of 7q, but no loss of 7q21-q22 markers, were mosaics, with only a minority of cells containing the cytogenetic deletion. The critical region of loss is defined by the markers D7S518 and D7S471, each showing loss in approximately 50% of informative cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)