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:3.1.3.5 (
5'-nucleotidase
)
3,167
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The multidisciplinary approach of leukemia phenotyping, called multiple marker analysis, led to changes in the classification systems of normal hematopoiesis and leukemic cells, and introduced the use of a biological and functional definition of leukemia, rather than merely morphological-cytochemical descriptions. Two major conclusions can be drawn from the findings of multiple marker analysis: 1) differentiation of leukemia is not abnormal but blocked ("maturation arrest"), and leukemic cells retain normal maturation-linked markers; and 2) no leukemia specific marker could be detected so far. Although leukemic cells show general qualitative features in common with normal cells, some quantitative characteristics of these similar attributes are peculiar to leukemic blasts. Qualitative and quantitative enzymological characteristics help to identify the cell lineage involved and to determine the developmental point at which maturation arrest occurs. The expression of isoenzymes is often linked to the presumptive sequence of developmental stages. Subsets within
ALL
subtypes showed pronounced modifications in their isoenzyme patterns associated with increasing maturity. Thus, enzyme markers can provide refined definitions of subgroups by biochemical criteria. Based on recent observations using the enzyme markers TdT, adenosine deaminase,
5'-nucleotidase
, purine nucleoside phosphorylase, acid phosphatase, and hexosaminidase, a scheme of enzymological expression in the various commonly accepted subtypes of acute lymphoid leukemia and acute nonlymphoid leukemia is presented. Enzyme marker analysis represents a useful tool as an adjunctive method in multiple marker analysis for assessing diagnosis, prognosis, and the evolutionary and pathogenetic mechanisms underlying the spectrum of leukemia subtypes. Furthermore, enzyme marker analysis may provide further insight into certain aspects of the pathobiology of leukemia which might not be elucidated by other methods.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Significance of enzyme markers as a part of multiple marker analysis in leukemia research. 300 Feb 10
High levels of the ectozyme
5'-nucleotidase
(5'-N) and the common
ALL
-antigen (cALLA) are coexpressed on leukemic blast cells in common
ALL
, in the lymphoid blast crisis of CML and also on the lymphoblastoid cell-line Nalm-1. Clinically this coexpression can help to subclassify leukemias and may be of diagnostic and prognostic significance. In an attempt to study the mechanism underlying this simultaneous expression plasmamembrane subfractionation was undertaken on Nalm-1. When membrane-shedding from intact cells is induced by sublytic concentrations of the lysophosphatidyl-choline analogue ET-12-H, membrane subfractions are obtained which contain 30-40% of total cellular 5'-N, which is most of the enzyme carried on the cell surface, in a highly enriched form. Under these conditions only a very low release of intracellular enzymes is observed. On the other hand cALLA is not accumulated in these membrane fractions to any appreciable extent. The predominant part of this antigen is still on the intact cells remaining after the shedding procedure. It is concluded that the simultaneous expression of 5'-N and cALLA on Nalm-1 and leukemic blasts is not regulated by a physical association or a close neighborhood of these antigens on the membrane level.
...
PMID:Independent expression of the surface markers 5'-nucleotidase and cALLA on leukemic cells. 629 37
The common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA) has been detected in biological fluids using a radioimmunoassay based on the inhibition of binding of 125I-labeled monoclonal anti-CALLA antibody to glutaraldehyde-fixed NALM-1 cells. With this assay, we showed first that CALLA was released in culture fluids from NALM-1 and Daudi cell lines but was absent from culture fluids from CALLA negative cell lines. Then, we found that the sera of 34 out of 42 patients (81%) with untreated common acute lymphoblastic leukemia (c-ALL) contained higher CALLA levels than any of the 42 serum samples from healthy controls. The specificity of these results was further demonstrated by testing in parallel the sera from 48 patients with CALLA negative leukemias, including 26 acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 12 T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), and 10 acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL). All of these sera gave negative results, except for one patient with AUL, who had a significantly elevated circulating CALLA level, and one patient with AML, who had a borderline CALLA level, 3 SD over the mean of the normal sera. Preliminary results suggest that circulating CALLA is associated with membrane fragments or vesicles, since the total CALLA antigenic activity was recovered in the pellet of the serum samples centrifuged at 100,000 g. In addition, the CALLA-positive pellets contained an enzyme considered as a membrane marker,
5'-nucleotidase
. Evaluation of the clinical importance of repeated serum CALLA determinations for the monitoring of c-
ALL
patients deserves further investigation.
...
PMID:Detection of the common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen in the serum of leukemia patients. 633 3
Changes in levels of purine degradative enzymes have been shown to occur during T-cell maturation in both rats and humans with a fall in adenosine deaminase (ADA) and a rise in purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) and
5'-nucleotidase
(5'NT) activities. We have investigated the effects of four thymic factors: thymosin fraction 5 (TMS-F5); thymosin alpha 1 (TMS-alpha 1); thymopoietin pentapeptide (TP-5); and thymic conditioned medium (CM) on TdT activity, purine enzyme levels and the phenotypic markers OKT3 (a marker for mature T cells) and NA1/34 (which reacts with immature cortical thymocytes) in human thymocytes and in the lymphoid leukaemic cell lines RPMI-8402 and JM1 (derived from Thy-
ALL
). All four thymic factors caused one or more maturation change in human thymocytes, e.g. TMS-F5 caused a significant increase in OKT3 expression, TMS-alpha 1 a fall in TdT and ADA activities and a rise in OKT3-positive cells, TP-5 an increase in PNP and CM a rise in 5'NT activity. TMS-F5 also caused a marked elevation of 5'NT in both the T lymphoblastic lines (P less than 0.001). On the other hand the non-physiological phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate (TPA), a tumour promotor with potency of inducing differentiation in some leukaemic cell lines, induced changes in both normal thymocytes and in the leukaemic line JM1 were inconsistent with maturation, e.g. a fall in the percentage of OKT3 cells. These observations suggest that maturation of normal thymocytes might proceed stepwise, each step requiring at least one of the thymic hormones. Although thymosin also induces differentiation changes in a malignant lymphoid line, the pattern of these differs from that induced in their normal counterparts.
...
PMID:Biochemical and immunological differentiation of human thymocytes induced by thymic hormones. 660 5
The relative levels of the deoxycytidine kinase (dCK), deoxyguanosine kinase (dGK), and the
5'-nucleotidase
(5'-NT) are of importance for the effect of many nucleoside analogues used in the treatment of hematological malignancies. To elucidate dCK, dGK and 5'-NT gene expressions in cell lines and in samples from patients with leukemia, we have established a real-time quantitative PCR (RQ-PCR) method. From the available dCK, dGK and 5'-NT cDNA sequences we designed specific primers and fluorogenic probes for the respective genes. The mRNA of dCK, dGK and 5'-NT was also measured by semi-quantitative RT-PCR, the enzyme activities by a radioactive substrate-based technique and Western blot was used to measure the amount of dCK and dGK protein. A MOLT-4 wild-type and its 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosylguanine (Ara-G)-resistant subline was used for the methods comparisons and the RQ-PCR assay was used in 35 samples from pediatric patients with
ALL
and AML. The results from RQ-PCR for the cell lines were in agreement with the semi-quantitative RT-PCR. The mRNA expression for dCK, dGK and 5'-NT (expressed as the ratio of the respective gene and the reference gene) in pediatric ALL and AML patients showed a large interindividual variability from 0.06 to 2.34, non-detectable to 0.06 and 0.04 to 0.30, respectively. These results show that the quantitative evaluation by RQ-PCR is a valuable tool in the determination of dCK, dGK and 5'-NT mRNA levels in cell lines and in clinical samples which were expressed at various levels. This rapid, convenient and specific method is suitable for further studies of these genes in clinical samples.
...
PMID:Real-time quantitative PCR assays for deoxycytidine kinase, deoxyguanosine kinase and 5'-nucleotidase mRNA measurement in cell lines and in patients with leukemia. 1189 43