DNA content and chromatin supraorganization defined in terms of patterns of chromatin texture were studied by image analysis in Feulgen-stained human breast MCF-10F epithelial cells expressing different stages of tumorigenic progression after treatment with benzo[a]pyrene (BP). Nontransformed MCF-10F, nontumorigenic transformed BP1, and tumorigenic BP1-E1 cell lines were analyzed. A relationship between changes in DNA content and chromatin texture and the expression of different stages of tumorigenesis were researched in interphase nuclei. A significant decrease in Feulgen–DNA amounts and absorbing areas suggesting aneuploidy, and first detected in nontumorigenic transformed BP1 cells, became more relevant in the tumorigenic cell line BP1-E1. Simultaneously, an increase in optical densities and a change in related parameters, demonstrating increased chromatin higher order packing states, occurred in transformed BP1 cells and extended over larger chromatin areas in tumorigenic BP1-E1 cells. The results indicate loss of DNA and a change in chromatin higher order packing states accompanying the expression of different stages of thein vitrotumorigenesis process in BP-transformed human breast epithelial cells. It is suspected that the gradually acquired chromatin “condensation” supraorganization pattern is associated with activated transcription activities previously suggested for these cells.