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Symptom
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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:2.7.7.48 (
transcriptase
)
9,479
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 78 year old female was found to have pancytopenia in February 1991. Bone marrow was normocellular with 11.7% blasts and showed dysmegakaryopoietic changes. A diagnosis of
MDS
(RAEB) was made and she was treated with transfusions and ubenimex. Leukemic transformation was noted in July. On Admission in October 1991, her laboratory examinations revealed the following: WBC 38,900/microliters with 93% blast, Hb 8.0 g/dl, Plt 2.1 x 10(4)/microliters, a hypercellular bone marrow with 74% blasts which were negative for myeloperoxidase (MPO) by light microscopy, but were positive by electron microscopy. Surface marker for CD13 was positive. These findings corresponded to M0 of the FAB subtype. Chromosome analysis revealed Ph1 chromosome with 46XX, t (9;22) (q34;q11) in 3 of 3 cells examined, Southern analysis showed the rearrangement of the break point cluster region (bcr). Reverse
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction technique demonstrated the presence of major bcr/abl mRNA. She was treated with transfusions and methyl-prednisolone. Her blast counts declined and Ph1 chromosome was only positive in 1 of 12 metaphases examined. She died of pneumonia in December 1991. Eleven cases with
MDS
showing Ph1 chromosome have previously been reported. The observations indicate that Ph1 chromosome positive acute leukemias were heterogenous in nature.
...
PMID:[RAEB transformed into AML (M0) showing Ph1 chromosome and rearrangement of major cluster region]. 825 8
The term
myelodysplasia
(
MDS
) refers to a group of bone marrow failure syndromes which are relatively rare in childhood. The pathogenesis of
MDS
is unknown, but a variety of chromosomal, molecular, and cytochemical abnormalities have been reported. We describe a 4-month-old female with
MDS
who presented with severe neutropenia and refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB). Bone marrow progenitor cell assays showed decreased erythroid and myeloid colony formation as compared to normal marrow, and the patient's serum further diminished colony formation of both her own and control marrow. These observations suggested the presence of a soluble factor inhibitory to hematopoiesis. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis of total RNA derived from the patient's bone marrow mononuclear cells revealed highly elevated tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) mRNA levels. Using a similar RT-PCR profile, TNF-alpha mRNA levels were found to be elevated in two other children with
myelodysplasia
. We conclude that TNF-alpha is produced in large amounts by bone marrow mononuclear cells of children with
MDS
, and we hypothesize that TNF-alpha plays an important role in the pathophysiology of the ineffective hematopoiesis observed in
MDS
.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha suppresses hematopoiesis in children with myelodysplasia. 895 Mar 41
Trisomy 11 as a sole chromosomal abnormality is a rare aberration observed in
myelodysplastic syndrome
(
MDS
) or acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML). Recently a partial tandem duplication of the MLL gene, located on chromosome band 11q23, has been identified in de novo AML with trisomy 11. We describe a 72-year-old woman suffering from
MDS
-derived overt leukemia with trisomy 11 and a tandem duplication of the MLL gene. At first the patient was found to have myeloblasts with Auer rods in the peripheral blood and diagnosed as
MDS
, refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation (RAEB-T). After 2 months a picture of overt leukemia (AML; M2) developed as shown by an increased number of myeloblasts. Various chemotherapy regimens had little effect, and she died of disease progression 15 months after admission. During her clinical course, the chromosome analyses consistently showed 47,XX, +11. Southern blot analysis of leukemic blasts on admission and in accelerated phase revealed identical rearranged bands of the MLL gene. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis excluded the possibility of masked translocation of the MLL gene to other chromosomes. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis using a forward exon 6 primer and a backward exon 3 primer demonstrated an in-frame fusion of exon 8 with exon 2. Our results indicated that a partial tandem duplication of exons 2-8 of the MLL gene could be observed in
MDS
-derived overt leukemia as well as de novo AML with trisomy 11.
...
PMID:Tandem duplication of the MLL gene in myelodysplastic syndrome-derived overt leukemia with trisomy 11. 913 17
The two matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) Mr 72,000 type IV collagenase (MMP-2, gelatinase A) and Mr 92,000 type IV collagenase (MMP-9, gelatinase B) play key roles in tissue remodeling and tumor invasion by digestion of extracellular matrix barriers. We have investigated the production of these two enzymes as well as the membrane-type MMP (MT1-MMP) and the tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 in the bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM-MNCs) of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML; n = 24), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML; n = 17),
myelodysplastic syndromes
(
MDS
; n = 8), and healthy donors (n = 5). Zymographic analysis of BM-MNC-conditioned medium showed that a Mr 92,000 gelatinolytic activity, identified as MMP-9 by Western blotting, was constitutively released from cells of all patients and healthy individuals examined in this study. In contrast, MMP-2 secretion was found to be absent in all samples from healthy donors but present in 8 of 11 (73%) of the samples from patients with primary AML, 7 of 8 (88%) with secondary AML, and only 1 of 5 (20%) cases with AML in remission, indicating MMP-2 to be produced by the leukemic blasts. MMP-2 release was not detected in CML cell-conditioned medium with the exception of two cases, both patients either being in or preceding blast crisis. In
MDS
, MMP-2 was found in three of eight (38%) of the patients, two of them undergoing progression of disease within 12 months. Quantitative Northern blot analysis in freshly isolated BM-MNCs showed a relatively low constitutive expression of TIMP-1 in all samples, whereas MMP-9 gene transcription was higher in healthy donors and CML samples, than in AML and
MDS
. Reverse
transcriptase
-PCR analysis revealed the presence of TIMP-2 mRNA in the majority of MMP-2-releasing BM-MNCs. MT1-MMP expression was present in most samples of patients with
MDS
or AML but absent in those with secondary AML and CML. Thus, we have shown that BM-MNCs continuously produce MMP-9 and TIMP-1 and demonstrated that leukemic blast cells additionally secrete MMP-2 representing a potential marker for dissemination in myeloproliferative malignancies.
...
PMID:Matrix metalloproteinase production by bone marrow mononuclear cells from normal individuals and patients with acute and chronic myeloid leukemia or myelodysplastic syndromes. 1035 46
Thrombopoietin (TPO), a major cytokine involved in megakaryocytopoiesis/thrombopoiesis, may be effective for treatment of the thrombocytopenia associated with
myelodysplastic syndromes
(
MDS
). However, it has been unclear whether TPO stimulates proliferation of
MDS
blasts, as observed in de novo acute myeloid leukemia. This study examined this concern. When marrow cells from 37
MDS
cases were cultured with or without recombinant human PEGylated TPO, TPO increased the blast number (stimulation index > or =1.5) in 9 of 16 high-risk
MDS
cases (refractory anemia with excess blasts [RAEB] and RAEB in transformation) and 4 of 10 cases with
MDS
transformed to acute leukemia (MDS-AL), but none of 11 cases with low-risk
MDS
(RA and RA with ringed sideroblasts). When the cell cycle of cultured cells was determined by three-color flow cytometry, TPO activated the cell cycle of
MDS
cells (causing a decrease in G(0)-phase cells) in most of the cases whose blast number increased in response to TPO. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction analysis detected TPO receptor messenger RNA in purified blasts from all six cases examined, irrespective of the response of their blasts to TPO in culture. Analysis of the patients' characteristics identified a high-serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) value as being associated with blast proliferation in high-risk
MDS
cases (p = 0.0036). We conclude that TPO stimulates in vitro proliferation of blasts from a fraction of
MDS
patients. High-risk
MDS
patients, especially those who have a high-serum LDH value, and
MDS
-AL patients should be monitored with particular care in clinical trials of TPO for
MDS
.
...
PMID:Effect of thrombopoietin on proliferation of blasts from patients with myelodysplastic syndromes. 1074 83
We report a 50-year-old man who developed therapy-related
myelodysplastic syndrome
after treatment with etoposide-including chemotherapy for extratesticular germ cell tumor. Chromosomal analysis showed inversion 11 (p15q22) translocation. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction amplification of patient RNA showed a fusion transcript of nucleoporin gene NUP98, and putative DEAD-box RNA helicase gene DDX10. NUP98 is implicated in the transformation through aberrant nucleocytoplasmic transport. DDX10 is suggested to be involved in ribosome assembly. The NUP98-DDX10 fusion transcript may promote the development of secondary hematological malignancies caused by DNA-topoisomerase II inhibitors through aberrant nucleocytoplasmic transport and/or alteration in ribosome assembly.
...
PMID:Fusion of the nucleoporin gene, NUP98, and the putative RNA helicase gene, DDX10, by inversion 11 (p15q22) chromosome translocation in a patient with etoposide-related myelodysplastic syndrome. 2575 91
The bone marrow (BM) in
myelodysplastic syndromes
(
MDS
) undergoes pathobiological changes that mimic an inflammatory process, and hence, an infectious etiology was suspected in these disorders. In the present report, we examined the bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMNC) of 19
MDS
patients and seven normal donors for the expression of one latency-related (Latency membrane protein 1 (LMP-1) and immediate early protein (IEP)) and one activation-related (BZLF and DNA-Pol) m-RNA each for two herpes viruses, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and cytomegalovirus (CMV), respectively. Reverse
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction was used for this purpose. The latency-related transcripts (EBV-LMP-1 and CMV-IEP) were present in all the
MDS
and normal specimens. Intriguingly, 10/19
MDS
specimens ( approximately 53%) and 2/7 normal donors ( approximately 28%) were positive for active EBV-BZLF (P=0.0067), while 2/19
MDS
specimens ( approximately 11%) with 1/7 normal ( approximately 14%) showed active CMV-DNA-Pol (P=0.1588). Later, from another set of
MDS
patients (n=7) and normal donors (n=4), BM stromal cultures were established, which, at a 75% confluency, were overlaid with cord blood mononuclear cells (CBMNC). IEP was detectable in the CBMNC before and after co-incubation with
MDS
, as well as normal stroma. So, it was also present both in
MDS
and normal stromal cells. The other three were absent both in
MDS
and normal stromal layers. In CBMNC though, active EBV-BZLF and CMV-DNA-Pol m-RNA were detectable in one of seven
MDS
co-cultures each, albeit from different patients. None of the normal co-cultures showed active virus, either in stroma or CBMNC. Thus, the present report demonstrates, for the first time, the presence of active herpes viruses in the BMMNC of
MDS
patients and reveals the ability of the
MDS
stroma to support the viral activation.
...
PMID:Presence of activation-related m-RNA for EBV and CMV in the bone marrow of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes. 1117 35
The t(11;20)(p15;q11) is a rare but recurrent translocation that so far has been described in only four acute myeloid leukemias (AMLs), two treatment-related
myelodysplastic syndromes
(t-MDSs), and one case of polycythemia vera. Recently, the t(11;20) was shown to result in a fusion of the NUP98 and TOP1 genes, with expression of the NUP98/TOP1 chimera encoded by the der(11)t(11;20), but not of the reciprocal TOP1/NUP98 on the der(20)t(11;20). The genomic breakpoints were subsequently mapped to introns 13 and 7 of NUP98 and TOP1, respectively. We present here a t-
MDS
with a three-way variant translocation, t(10;20;11)(q24;q11;p15), that generates a der(11)t(11;20) but not a der(20)t(11;20), strongly suggesting that the der(11) harbors the critical genetic rearrangement. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed a NUP98/TOP1 fusion in which exon 13 of NUP98 was fused in-frame with exon 8 of TOP1. Extra long (XL) genomic PCR and subsequent sequence analyses showed that the breakpoint in NUP98 occurred at nucleotide (nt) 3461 of intron 13, close to a MER (medium reiteration frequency interspersed repetitive element) repeat, and that the breakpoint in TOP1 was at nt 1436 of intron 7, downstream of a MIR (mammalian-wide interspersed repeats) repetitive element. Genomic XL PCR did not amplify the reciprocal TOP1/NUP98, nor was this chimera expressed, as expected from the cytogenetic finding. The present results provide further support for the involvement of the NUP98/TOP1 transcript, but not of the reciprocal one, in the development of
MDS
/AML. Furthermore, the three cases genomically characterized to date have all been treatment-related and have all harbored breakpoints in intron 13 of NUP98 and intron 7 of TOP1, suggesting that these introns are susceptible to chemotherapy-induced breakage.
...
PMID:Expression of NUP98/TOP1, but not of TOP1/NUP98, in a treatment-related myelodysplastic syndrome with t(10;20;11)(q24;q11;p15). 1197 59
A t(11;20)(p15;q11) is a rare but recurrent chromosomal aberration, reported in one case of polycythemia vera and a few cases of de novo acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) and therapy-related
myelodysplastic syndrome
(t-MDS). In t-
MDS
cases, the translocation resulted in the NUP98/TOP1 fusion transcript. The NUP98 gene has been suggested as the target for therapy-related malignancies. The reciprocal TOP1/NUP98 chimera, however, has not yet been encountered. We report a further case of de novo AML, subtype M2 in the French-American-British (FAB) classification, in which the reverse-
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed the NUP98/TOP1 chimera and also, for the first time, its reciprocal TOP1/NUP98. The literature review disclosed that, among six cases of de novo AML with t(11;20), the NUP98 gene was shown to be involved in one case and the NUP98/TOP1 chimera was detected in another. The translocation seems to be frequently associated with the FAB M2 subtype, younger age, hyperleukocytosis, and poor prognosis; thus, this translocation may identify a subset of not-therapy-related AML patients with shared clinical features.
...
PMID:A t(11;20)(p15;q11) may identify a subset of nontherapy-related acute myelocytic leukemia. 1503 93
Treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) with a combination of anthracycline-based chemotherapy and all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) leads to very high rates of complete remission and survival. There are only a limited number of publications on the development of therapy-related
myelodysplastic syndrome
(
MDS
) or acute myeloid leukemia during follow-up of APL. Although drugs targeting at DNA-topoisomerase II characteristically induce translocations involving 11q23, this was seldom seen in patients treated for APL. We report on a patient initially diagnosed with APL. Response to therapy was monitored by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and reverse-
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction for the PML-RARalpha rearrangement. Consecutive samples showed a swift and complete reduction of PML-RARalpha rearranged cells. Twenty months after diagnosis, however, conventional cytogenetics revealed a complex karyotype with a translocation involving 11q23 and loss of chromosomes 7q and Xq. FISH analysis with the MLL probe identified 2q37 (harboring the SEPT2 gene) as the translocation partner of chromosome 11. We consider the rather unique t(2;11)(q37;q23) as the primary event causing therapy-related
MDS
in our patient. This case stresses the importance of conventional karyotyping to be performed on a regular basis in all treated APL patients for the early detection of chromosomal aberrations that indicate the development of therapy-related
MDS
or acute myeloid leukemia.
...
PMID:Translocation (2;11)(q37;q23) in therapy-related myelodysplastic syndrome after treatment for acute promyelocytic leukemia. 1820 42
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