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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antibodies to human immune deficiency (HIV) virus were studied in 2000 individuals including cases of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), leprosy, chronic renal failure on haemodialysis and patients attending
STD
clinics. A group of blood donors was also screened, ELISA kits provided by Wellcome Diagnostics were used. Results indicate that the ELISA values were far above the cut off figure in all except in a couple where the husband who had stayed in Uganda for several years, and had features of full blown AIDS died 4 months after the diagnosis. The spouse contacted AIDS within a relatively short incubation period and died within 6 months of diagnosis. The North Indian population thus appears to be free of this virus so far. This observation will be an important lead mark in the future epidemiology of HIV infection in India.
...
PMID:HIV-I antibodies in health and disease. 209
A monoclonal antibody reactive with the immunoglobulin heavy chain (
TEC
IgM) has been conjugated to saporin-6 (SAP), which is the major ribosome-inactivating protein from the seeds of the plant Saponaria officinalis. Studies with Burkitt's lymphoma cell line Bjab 113 demonstrate that this immunotoxin is capable of killing 3 logs (99.9%) of clonogenic lymphoma cells after a 2-hour incubation. The presence of human bone marrow inhibits the activity of the conjugate. However, full potency of
TEC
IgM-SAP immunotoxin is restored by adding 1 mM amantadine to the incubation medium. The reaction is highly specific and is inhibited by the presence of excess anti-mu-antibody or human serum. Clonal growth of other Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines is inhibited to a lesser extent by the immunotoxin. The presence of surface IgM on the different cell lines is directly correlated to target cell killing by
TEC
IgM-SAP. Isolation of Bjab 113 clones surviving treatment demonstrates that only a minority are truly resistant and that the others randomly escape the treatment. The highly potent and specific activity of this conjugate in the presence of bone marrow buffy coat and its exceptionally rapid onset of action make this conjugate a good candidate for the ex vivo elimination of neoplastic cells from the bone marrow of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
patients.
...
PMID:Activity of a monoclonal antibody-saporin-6 conjugate against B-lymphoma cells. 325 67
We have used fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) with a series of yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) clones that map to the long arm of chromosome 6 (6q) to define the region(s) of deletion in seven cases of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(
NHL
), in which a deletion of 6q had been detected by conventional cytogenetics. The FISH analysis detected two regions of deletion: (i) A proximal region flanked by M6P1 (6q14-15) and
FYN
(6q21), containing D6S246, which was missing in all seven cases. This locus was also found to be deleted in all six cases of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) studied previously. (ii) A second region of 6q, which was distal to 6q23.1 (D6S238) and included ESR (6q25.1) and D6S281 (6q27), which was shown to be present in all our cases of ALL, was found to be deleted in 4 of the 7 cases of
NHL
. Our results support the suggestion that tumour suppressor genes, involved in the pathogenesis of lymphoid malignancies, may be present within these regions.
...
PMID:Common region of deletion on the long arm of chromosome 6 in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 752 44
In the ongoing trial ALL-BFM 90 for the treatment of childhood non-B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) 1468 unselected patients (pts) were enrolled from 84 centers in Germany and Switzerland from 4/90 to 12/93. Based on the results of the previous trial ALL/
NHL
-BFM 86 this treatment program focused especially on therapy modifications for average (MRG) and high risk (HRG) pts, on the evaluation of therapy response for prognosis, and on the identification of high risk pts by molecular genetics. For average risk pts consolidation therapy was intensified by the addition of L-asparaginase (L-ASP) on a randomized basis. In HRG induction and consolidation therapy was modified by introduction of early intensification elements that had proved to be effective in relapsed pts. This patient group was randomized for the evaluation of the effects of G-CSF administered in the intervals between the intensification elements. Distribution of the 1376 eligible pts into the three treatment arms SRG (standard risk), MRG, and HRG was as expected (17 pts not yet assigned): 385 pts (28.0%), 834 pts (60.6%), and 140 pts (10.2%), respectively. Treatment consisted of the 8-drug induction (Protocol I), consolidation (Protocol M), reinduction (Protocol II), and maintenance therapy (total therapy duration 24 months). The drug doses and combinations were only slightly modified compared to the previous study ALL-BFM 86 with the exception of the randomized L-ASP containing arm MRG-2 (Protocol M-A) and group HRG. Preventive cranial irradiation was reduced to 12 Gy and applied to MRG and HRG pts only. As in study ALL-BFM 86, the initial response to a 7-day exposure to prednisone and to the first intrathecal injection of MTX at diagnosis was evaluated at day 8 of treatment with regard to blast count in peripheral blood (PB). In addition, pts were now investigated for the presence of blasts in the bone marrow (BM) at day 15 of treatment to compare the prognostic power of both response parameters. Identification of translocation t(9; 22) and/or BCR-
ABL
rearrangement characterized a small subgroup of pts that were not detected by poor initial therapy response. These pts were enrolled in HRG for more intensive treatment including allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). After a median observation time of 22 months, the overall probability for event-free survival (p-EFS) is 82 +/- 2%. 11 pts (0.8%) died before complete remission (CR) was achieved, 15 pts (1.1%) died while in CR for reasons other than relapse.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Concept and interim result of the ALL-BFM 90 therapy study in treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia in children and adolescents: the significance of initial therapy response in blood and bone marrow]. 752 27
In order to identify the oncogene associated with malignant transformation 141 leukemia and malignant lymphoma patients were studied by FISH. Specific chromosome regions were translocated onto structurally abnormal chromosomes, resulting in partial tri-, tetra-, or pentasomy of these regions. We designated this type of chromosomal translocation as a "segmental jumping translocation (SJT)". These SJTs were found in several chromosomal regions such as 8q24, 9q34, 11q13, 11q23, 13q14, 14q24-q32, 21q22 and 22q11. The SJT at 9q34, which involved the
ABL
oncogene, was found in three of nine secondary leukemia patients who were treated with anticancer drugs and radiation.
Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients had 3-7 copies of SJT at 11q13 or 11q23. SJT at 14q32 and 21q22 were predominantly detected in the acute type of adult T-cell leukemia (8 of 27 patients) and in AML (5 of 17 patients). The size of the SJT regions varied among the patients. The overlapping region within the SJT could involve oncogene(s) associated with transformation to the advanced stage in leukemia and lymphoma patients. The SJT provides evidence of a new mechanism for gene amplification and formation of unidentified marker chromosomes in the advanced disease stage.
...
PMID:Segmental jumping translocation in leukemia and lymphoma with a highly complex karyotype. 964 70
HOX11, a divergent homeodomain-containing transcription factor, was isolated from the breakpoint of the nonrandom t(10;14)(q24;q11) chromosome translocation found in human T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias. The translocation places the HOX11 coding sequence under the transcriptional control of TCR alpha/delta regulatory elements, resulting in ectopic expression of a normal HOX11 protein in thymocytes. To investigate the oncogenic potential of HOX11, we targeted its expression in lymphocytes of transgenic mice by placing the human cellular DNA under the transcriptional control of Ig heavy chain or
LCK
regulatory sequences. Only IgHmu-HOX11 mice expressing low levels of HOX11 were viable. During their second year of life, all HOX11 transgenic mice became terminally ill with more than 75% developing large cell lymphomas in the spleen, which frequently disseminated to thymus, lymph nodes, and other nonhematopoietic tissues. Lymphoma cells were predominantly clonal IgM+IgD+ mature B cells. Repopulation of severe combined immunodeficient mice with cells from hyperplastic spleens indicated that the HOX11 tumor phenotype was transplantable. Before tumor development, expression of the transgene did not result in perturbations in lymphopoiesis; however, lymphoid hyperplasia involving the splenic marginal zones was present in 20% of spleens. Our studies provide direct evidence that expression of HOX11 in lymphocytes leads to malignant transformation. These mice are a useful model system to study mechanisms involved in transformation from B-lineage hyperplasia to malignant lymphoma and for testing novel approaches to therapy. They represent a novel animal model for
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
of peripheral mature B cell origin.
...
PMID:A model for spontaneous B-lineage lymphomas in IgHmu-HOX11 transgenic mice. 981 90
This report describes two cases of Philadelphia chromosome-negative (Ph(-)) non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs) recognized in patients with chronic phase Ph-positive (Ph(+)) chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Lymph node biopsy of patient 1 was initially diagnosed as diffuse large B cell
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(
NHL
, T cell rich variant), but at relapse showed immunoblastic features with a marked decrease of admixed lymphocyte components. Patient 2 presented with thickened parietal pleura which revealed a CD30-positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma showing null cell phenotype and genotype with abundant admixed neutrophils and lymphocytes. At the time of lymphoma diagnosis, the patients had CML for 33 and 10 months, respectively. DNA obtained from bone marrow cells at the time of lymphoma diagnosis showed BCR/ABL gene rearrangements by both Southern blot analysis and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), but lacked both immunoglobulin and T cell receptor gene rearrangements. BCR gene rearrangement and BCR/ABL fusion gene were also identified in lymph node and pleural biopsies by Southern blot and RT-PCR analysis, respectively. However, both biopsy specimens also contained reactive lymphocytes and neutrophils, and no fusion signals between BCR and
ABL
genes were identified in the hyperdiploid lymphoma cells of either case by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). These data suggest the lymphoma cells in both cases were not genetically associated with BCR/ABL. Therefore, these cases were not diagnosed as an extramedullary localized blast crisis in CML, but as Ph(-) NHLs. This represents the first definitive demonstration of peripheral B cell lymphoma occurring by a separate genetic pathway, lacking BCR/ABL, in patients with Ph(+) CML. A review of the literature identified two different subtypes of malignant lymphomas arising in patients with an antecedent or concurrent diagnosis of CML. The most common are T cell lymphomas displaying an immature thymic phenotype, while peripheral B cell lymphomas are more rare. Our study shows, however, that 'Ph(+)
NHL
' occurring in CML or acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) may represent an unrelated neoplasm, even if standard cytogenetic analysis reveals a Ph(+) chromosome, and that FISH is required to confirm whether a localized lymphoid neoplasm is either a true extramedullary localized blast crisis or genetically distinct neoplasm. Leukemia(2000) 14, 169-182.
...
PMID:Ph-negative non-Hodgkin's lymphoma occurring in chronic phase of Ph-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia is defined as a genetically different neoplasm from extramedullary localized blast crisis: report of two cases and review of the literature. 1063 93
For people immunosuppressed by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), we expect an increase in cancer incidence similar to that documented in transplant patients. We examined the cancer spectrum in an HIV-infected cohort, specifically malignancies not currently associated with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), in relation to the general population. Cancer incidence data for residents of Harris County, Texas, diagnosed between 1975 and 1994, were linked to HIV/AIDS registry data by Soundex code and date of birth to identify malignancies in an HIV-infected cohort of 14,986 persons. Incidence of cancer in this cohort was compared to the general population by standardized incidence ratio (SIR) analysis. From the HIV-infected cohort, 2289 persons (15%) were identified as having one or more malignancies, with 97% occurring in males. The linkage alone identified 29.5% of the malignancies, of which only 28.7% were diagnosed in males. Adjusting for age, HIV-infected men and women had incidences of cancer that were 16.7 [95% confidence interval (CI) 16.1-17.3] and 2.9 (95% CI 2.3-3.7) times that expected for the general population of Harris County, Texas. Besides Kaposi's sarcoma,
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
, cervix cancer and brain lymphoma, non-AIDS related malignancies of Hodgkin's lymphoma, non-melanotic skin cancer in males and colon cancer in females, exhibited significant SIRs of 5.6 (95% CI 3.6-8.4), 6.9 (95% CI 4.8-9.5) and 4.0 (95% CI 1.1-10.2). Increased incidences of lung, prostate and breast malignancies were not seen in this HIV cohort. Persons infected with HIV appear to be at increased risk for the non-AIDS related malignancies, Hodgkin's lymphoma, non-melanotic skin cancer in males and colon cancer in females.
Int J
STD
AIDS 1999 Dec
PMID:HIV-related malignancies: community-based study using linkage of cancer registry and HIV registry data. 1063 60
Calpain is a calcium-dependent cysteine protease that is implicated in calcium-dependent cell death, and calpain inhibitors are generally considered as inhibitors of apoptosis. To the contrary, in the present study, we found that calpain inhibitor II (CPI-2) triggers rapid apoptosis in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(
NHL
) cells. All target cell lines were killed by CPI-2, including: ALL-1, a multidrug-resistant BCR-ABL fusion transcript-positive t(9;22) pro-B ALL cell line; RS4;11, a highly radiation-resistant MLL-AF4 fusion transcript-positive t(4;11) pre-pre B ALL cell line; RAMOS, a highly radiation-resistant and p53-deficient Burkitt's lymphoma cell line; DAUDI, a Burkitt's leukemia/lymphoma cell line; NALM-6, a pre-B ALL cell line; and JURKAT and MOLT-3, two T-lineage ALL/
NHL
cell lines. CPI-2-induced apoptosis in
LYN
-deficient and
BTK
-deficient subclones of the DT-40 lymphoma B cell line as effectively as it did in wild-type DT-40 cells. Thus, CPI-2-induced apoptosis is not dependent on the protein tyrosine kinases
LYN
or
BTK
. Notably, caspase inhibitor I effectively inhibited CPI-2-induced apoptosis, suggesting that the inhibition of a CPI-2-susceptible protease results in caspase activation, leading to apoptosis in ALL/
NHL
cells. Unlike the high calpain-expressing ALL/
NHL
cell lines, myeloid leukemia cell lines HL-60/AML, K562/CML, and U937/AMML, or solid tumor cell lines BT-20/breast cancer, PC-3/prostate cancer, U373/glioblastoma, and HeLa/epitheloid cancer, were not susceptible to the cytotoxicity of CPI-2. Taken together, our results identify calpain as a new molecular target for the treatment of ALL and
NHL
. CPI-2 and its analogues represent a promising new class of antileukemia/lymphoma agents that deserves further development.
...
PMID:Calpain inhibitor II induces caspase-dependent apoptosis in human acute lymphoblastic leukemia and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma cells as well as some solid tumor cells. 1087 99
We examined the relationship between the haematogenous dissemination of Mycoplasma fermentans and
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(
NHL
) in 265 HIV-1 positive patients. A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay was used to detect M. fermentans in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from 50 patients enrolled consecutively from an HIV outpatient clinic in 1991 (cohort 1), 56 patients with lower respiratory tract infection who underwent bronchoscopy in 1992 (cohort 2), and 159 patients who were enrolled into a natural history cohort study in 1994 (cohort 3). The incidence of
NHL
among the patients was determined in 1998. The PBMCs of 29 patients (10.9%) were positive for M. fermentans (8 in cohort 1, 13 in cohort 2 and 8 in cohort 3) and 11 patients (4.2%) developed
NHL
which was confirmed histologically (3 in cohort 1, 4 in cohort 2 and 4 in cohort 3). We found a statistically significant association between the presence of M. fermentans and the development of
NHL
in the combined cohort (risk ratio [RR]=6.78 [95% confidence interval (CI) 2.21--20.84], P=0.003 Fisher's exact test [FET]). This association remained significant even after adjustment in a multivariate analysis for CD4 cell count and HIV disease status at the time of M. fermentans testing (RR=7.97 [95% CI=2.16--29.47], P=0.002).
Int J
STD
AIDS 2001 Aug
PMID:An association of disseminated Mycoplasma fermentans in HIV-1 positive patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1148 89
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