Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.11.1.7 (
peroxidase
)
65,474
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) presenting as severe jaundice. The patient, a 59-year-old man, was found to have abnormal liver function, including an elevated total bilirubin level (13.5 mg/dl) with hepatosplenomegaly, but no detectable lymphadenopathy. A liver biopsy and bone marrow examination revealed a lymphoid neoplasm. Pathologic features included invasion of an abnormal clone into the sinusoidal region of the liver, diffuse bone marrow involvement (41.6% of all nucleated cells) and splenomegaly. Small numbers of malignant cells were also detected in the peripheral blood. B-cell markers, such as terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT), CD10, CD19, CD20 and HLA-DR were positive, and CD2, CD3, CD4, CD5,
CD7
, CD8, kappa, lambda, cytoplasmic mu and
myeloperoxidase
were negative. Cytogenetic analysis detected hyperdiploidy. In this case, a dose-attenuated CHOP regimen attained complete remission. To date, preferential infiltration to liver sinusoids has been noted in hepatosplenic gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma, other NK/T-cell malignancies, and some cases of hairy cell leukemia. Severe jaundice due to preferential infiltration of leukemic cells into liver sinusoids is rather uncommon as a presenting feature of ALL.
...
PMID:[Preferential infiltration of liver sinusoids in acute lymphoblastic leukemia]. 1182 21
A 2-year-old Japanese boy who presented with multiple cervical, axillary, and inguinal lymphadenopathy was diagnosed by immunocytochemical analysis as having myeloid/natural killer (NK) cell precursor acute leukemia. Leukemic blasts in the bone marrow were positive for CD56 (NK marker),
CD7
(T-cell marker), CD33 (myeloid marker), CD34, and HLA-DR. Tumor cells in a lymph node were also positive for CD2, cytoplasmic CD3 (T-cell marker),
CD7
, CD33, CD34, and CD56, but negative for
peroxidase
staining and other T-cell, NK, and myeloid markers. Southern blot analysis showed no rearrangement bands for T-cell receptor delta and immunoglobulin heavy chain. Chromosomal analysis revealed 46,XY,inv(7)(p21q21). Neither chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia nor that for acute myeloid leukemia induced remission in this patient. However, complete remission was achieved by the administration of L-asparaginase (6,000 U/m2 for 5 days). Because the disease was considered refractory to standard chemotherapy, cord blood transplantation was performed from an HLA 1-locus mis-matched unrelated donor. The conditioning regimen consisted of total body irradiation, cytarabine, and cyclophosphamide, and cyclosporine and short-term methotrexate were employed for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis. Hematological reconstitution was rapid, and only grade I acute GVHD was observed. The patient has been in remission for more than 24 months after transplantation. Our findings indicate that combination therapy with L-asparaginase and allogeneic stem cell transplantation may be useful for the treatment of myeloid/NK cell precursor acute leukemia.
...
PMID:Treatment of a child with myeloid/NK cell precursor acute leukemia with L-asparaginase and unrelated cord blood transplantation. 1193 70
Anewborn with a transient myeloproliferative disorder and a myeloid/natural killer cell leukemia phenotype is described. The blasts expressed
CD7
, CD33, CD34, CD56, and CD117 but did not react with cytoplasmic
myeloperoxidase
and were negative for cy CD22, HLA-DR, and CD90 expression. No megakaryoblastic surface markers were identified. The blast population disappeared from the peripheral blood and bone marrow within 2 months, but hepatomegaly and recurrent respiratory insufficiency persisted. The patient died of unilateral pneumonia in the third month of life. Neither extramedullary infiltration nor other hematologic signs of disease progression were found.
...
PMID:Transient myeloproliferative disorder with a CD7+ and CD56+ myeloid/natural killer cell precursor phenotype in a newborn. 1214 90
A 64-yr-old Japanese man presented with mild anemia, leukocytosis, and thrombocytosis in November 1999. A diagnosis of chronic myeloid leukemia was made with a positive Ph chromosome, and interferon alpha treatment was started, 6 million units a day. Two years later, in October 2001, the patient developed leukocytosis, an increased LDH level, and large blasts with basophilic cytoplasm with cytoplasmic projections appeared in the peripheral blood. Bone marrow aspiration revealed increased blasts (59.6%). These blasts were negative on
peroxidase
stain, positive on acid phosphatase, and weakly positive on alpha naphthyl butyrate esterase stain and periodic acid-Schiff stain. Immunohistochemical staining with monoclonal antibodies revealed that these blasts were strongly positive with anti-CD41 (glycoprotein IIb/IIIa), weakly positive with
CD7
, CD33, and CD34, and negative with other monoclonal antibodies. A diagnosis of megakaryoblastic transformation from chronic myeloid leukemia was therefore made. Two-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) for portions of the major-bcr and abl genes from bone marrow cells revealed two fused signals in 90.6% and one fused signal in 5.8% of 106 cells. A cytogenetic study revealed that bone marrow cells were 69, XYY, +6, -7, +8, -9, t(9;22)(q34;q11), +11, +13, -15, -16, dic(17;18)(p11;p11), -18, +19, +21, der(22)t(9;22) in six of nine examined cells. These findings confirmed that these megakaryoblasts originated from megakaryocytes of the chronic myeloid leukemia clone.
...
PMID:Double Ph-positive megakaryoblastic transformation of chronic myeloid leukemia. 1236 19
Knowledge of the blast phenotype in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) would be valuable, as in other malignancies, but remains sparse. This is mainly because MDS blasts are a minor population in clinical samples, making analysis difficult. Thus, for this blast phenotype study, we prepared blast-rich specimens (using a new density centrifugation reagent for harvesting blasts) from blood and marrow samples of 95 patients with various MDS subtypes and 21 patients with acute leukemia transformed from MDS (AL-MDS). Flow cytometry revealed that a high proportion of the enriched blast cells (EBCs) from almost all patients showed an immunophenotype of committed myeloid precursors (CD34(+)CD38(+)HLA-DR(+)CD13(+)CD33(+)), regardless of the disease subtype. The cytochemical reaction for
myeloperoxidase
was negative in 58% of the cases. Thus, the EBC phenotype is more immature in MDS than in de novo acute myeloid leukemia. MDS EBCs often coexpressed stem cell antigens and late-stage myeloid antigens asynchronously, but rarely expressed T- and B-lymphoid cell-specific antigens. Markers for myeloid cell maturation (CD10 and CD15) were more prevalent on EBCs from low-risk MDS (refractory anemia [RA] and RA with ringed sideroblasts), whereas markers for myeloid cell immaturity (
CD7
and CD117) were more prevalent on EBCs from high-risk MDS (chronic myelomonocytic leukemia, RA with excess blasts [RAEB], and RAEB in transformation) and AL-MDS. A shift to a more immature phenotype of EBCs, accompanying disease progression, was also documented by sequential phenotyping of the same patients. Further,
CD7
positivity of EBCs was an independent variable for a poor prognosis in MDS. These data represent new, valuable information regarding MDS.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of phenotypic features of blasts in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome. 1239 41
Hematopoietic neoplasm coexpressing CD4 and CD56 includes a subset of acute myeloid leukemia with myelomonocytic differentiation, plasmacytoid monocyte tumor, and other immature hematopoietic neoplasms of undefined origin. Herein, we report a CD4+CD56+CD68+ hematopoietic tumor that was thought to be a tumor of plasmacytoid monocytes. This case is unique in the absence of accompanying myelomonocytic leukemia and the faint expression of cCD3 on the tumor cells. The patient was a 22-yr old man presented with multiple lymphadenopathy and an involvement of the bone marrow. Tumor cells were large and monomorphic with an angulated eosinophilic cytoplasm of moderate amount. Nuclei of most tumor cells were eccentric and round with one or two prominent nucleoli. Rough endoplasmic reticulum was prominent in electron microscopic examination. Tumor cells expressed CD4,
CD7
, CD10, CD45RB, CD56, CD68, and HLA-DR and were negative for CD1a, CD2, sCD3, CD5, CD13, CD14, CD20, CD33, CD34, CD43, CD45RA, TIA-1, S-100, and TdT. cCD3 was not detected in the immunostaining using paraffin tissue, but was faintly expressed in flow cytometry and immunostaining using a touch imprint slide. T-cell receptor gene rearrangement analysis and EBV in situ hybridization showed negative results. Cytochemically,
myeloperoxidase
, Sudan black B, and alpha naphthyl butyrate esterase were all negative.
...
PMID:CD4+CD56+CD68+hematopoietic tumor of probable plasmacytoid monocyte derivation with weak expression of cytoplasmic CD3. 1248 12
The purpose of this study was to optimize a fixation procedure for detection of cytoplasmic antigens by flow cytometry(FCM) and to evaluate the effect of intracellular CD3, CD22, CD79a and
myeloperoxidase
(MPO) in lineage assignment. Four kinds of fixation procedure and three or four color direct immunofluorescence staining were used to permeate cell membrane and label cell surface and intracellular antigens by means of FCM. Results showed that percentage of cytoplasmic antigens positive cells was the highest and cell scatter and fluorescence intensity of CD45 were not changed after using of FACS permeabilization solution. MPO protein was positive in 16/18 acute myeloid leukemia(AML) patients. 4 cases of T cell-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cases were positive for cytoplasmic CD3(c CD3) but surface CD3 was negative. c CD22 was only detected in 9/13 of B-ALL and cCD79a was positive in 5/5 B-ALL. 18/38 cases of acute leukemia were expressed in more than one lineage marker, 8/21 cases of acute non-lymphocytic leukemia(ANLL) were
CD7
positive. 7/17 cases of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) expressed CD13. After further cytoplasmic antigen detection, one was considered to be a T/myeloid biphenotypic leukemia, another one was diagnosed as biclonal or mixed leukemia. The results suggest that intracellular CD3,CD22,CD79a and MPO are lineage specific markers, they are very important for biphenotypic and biclonal/mixed acute leukemia identification
...
PMID:[Detection of cytoplasmic antigens by flow cytometry and its implication for leukemia immunophenotyping]. 1251 30
The megakaryoblastic leukemia cell line MOLM-16 was established at relapse from the peripheral blood of a 77-year-old Japanese woman with minimally differentiated acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M0). Immunophenotyping of the fresh leukemic cells revealed a myeloid/NK precursor phenotype being positive for
CD7
, CD13, CD33, CD34, and CD56. In addition, megakaryocyte-associated antigens CD41 and CD61 were found to be positive. The established cell line designated MOLM-16 was proliferatively responsive to the treatment with various cytokines including EPO, GM-CSF, IL-3, PIXY-321, and TPO. MOLM-16 revealed characteristics of the megakaryocytic lineage in terms of immunophenotyping being positive for CD9, CD31, CD36, CD41, CD61, CD62P, CD63, CD110, CD151, thrombospondin, von Willebrand factor (vWf), and fibrinogen. Electron microscopic analysis showed positivity for ultrastructural platelet
peroxidase
in the nuclear envelope. The karyotype analysis of MOLM-16 revealed various numerical and structural abnormalities including t(6;8)(q21;q24.3), t(9;18)(q13;q21) and marker chromosomes. The extensive immunological, cytogenetic and functional characterization of MOLM-16 suggests that this cell line may represent a scientifically significant in vitro model which could facilitate the evaluation of megakaryocytic differentiation.
...
PMID:Megakaryoblastic leukemia cell line MOLM-16 derived from minimally differentiated acute leukemia with myeloid/NK precursor phenotype. 1252 22
Biphenotypic acute leukemias account for 4% to 8% of all acute leukemias. Most of these leukemias are of myeloid-B-cell or myeloid-T-cell lineage. Acute myeloid-natural killer cell leukemia has been recognized recently. We report the first case, to our knowledge, of CD56(+) acute leukemia showing unequivocal myeloid and B-cell differentiation in a 20-year-old woman, whose blast cells were positive for
myeloperoxidase
, CD13, CD33, CD117, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, CD19, CD20, CD22, CD34, HLA-DR, and CD56 but negative for CD3, CD5,
CD7
, and CD10. Rare Auer rods were identified in the blast cells. Polymerase chain reaction assays showed rearrangement of immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene and absence of Epstein-Barr virus DNA. We propose that this novel form of multilineage leukemia may represent the neoplastic counterpart of a progenitor that can give rise to myeloid, B, and natural killer cells.
...
PMID:Acute leukemia with myeloid, B-, and natural killer cell differentiation. 1256 62
This article describes a rare case of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from an unrelated donor (URD) in an adult Japanese male with Down syndrome (DS) diagnosed as having acute mixed lineage leukemia. Examination of peripheral blood demonstrated WBC 6.2 x 10(9)/l with 45.5% blasts at admission. Leukemic blasts with positive
peroxidase
stain, but negative periodic acid-Schiff stain comprised 91.6% on bone marrow specimen. Surface marker analysis of these blasts showed the following: CD3(-), CD5(-),
CD7
(-), CD10(+), CD19(+), CD13(+), CD14(-), CD33(+), CD34(+), CD41a(-), and CD56(-). Based on these data, he was diagnosed as having acute mixed lineage (myeloid and B-lymphoid lineage) leukemia. He achieved complete remission (CR) by lymphoid-oriented chemotherapy performed after ineffective myeloid-oriented therapy. After four courses of consolidation chemotherapy for lymphoid lineage blasts, recurrence due to proliferation of myeloblasts had occurred. Thereafter, a second CR was obtained by low dose cytosine arabinoside (AraC) therapy. As this patient was considered to have a high risk of relapse, we selected allogeneic BMT from URD. Severe stomatitis due to methotrexate (MTX) occurred probably due to altered pharmacokinetics usually observed in DS patients. Though acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) of systemic skin (grade II) and pneumonia were observed during neutropenia due to the post-conditioning regimen, he could be discharged from our hospital on the 135th day after BMT. On day 205 post-BMT, however, bronchiolitis obliterans (BO) occurred as a chronic GVHD disorder. Despite therapy with prednisolone and FK506, he died on day 400 post-BMT because of respiratory failure due to BO. In DS patients, superfluous toxicities due to MTX and AraC treatment have been reported, and these toxicities have been considered due to altered pharmacokinetics in patients with DS. This patient could tolerate the transplant conditioning regimen commonly used in patients without DS.
...
PMID:Unrelated donor bone marrow transplantation for acute mixed lineage (myeloid and B-lymphoid lineage) leukemia in an adult with Down syndrome. 1270 27
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10