Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (
CD10
)
9,792
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Philadelphia (Ph1) chromosome, or its molecular counterpart, the
BCR-ABL fusion
gene, is a rare but important prognostic indicator in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), but its impact on adult ALL has not been well ascertained. A prospective study of the
BCR-ABL fusion
gene was begun on patients entered on clinical trials conducted by the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB). All patients received intensive, multiagent chemotherapy that included daunorubicin. Over 2 years, 56 patients were studied for molecular evidence of a BCR-ABL gene using Southern blot and pulsed-field gel hybridization analysis. Results were compared with cytogenetic detection of a Ph1 chromosome, and clinical features were compared for the BCR-ABL-positive and -negative groups. Molecular methods detected the BCR-ABL gene in 30% of cases compared with cytogenetic detection of the Ph1 chromosome in only 23%. The majority of cases (76%) showed the p190 gene subtype similar to pediatric ALL; the BCR-ABL-positive cases displayed a more homogeneous immunophenotype than the BCR-ABL-negative cases and were predominantly
CALLA
positive (86%) and B-cell surface antigen positive (82%). The rate of achieving complete remission was similar in the BCR-ABL-positive and -negative groups (71% and 77%, respectively, P = .72). There were more early relapses in the BCR-ABL-positive group, resulting in a shorter remission duration that was especially marked in the
CALLA
-positive and B-cell antigen-positive populations. These preliminary data suggest that the impact of the BCR-ABL gene on clinical outcome in ALL may be on maintenance of complete remission (CR) rather than achievement of CR when aggressive, multiagent chemotherapy is used. This study identifies the BCR-ABL gene as an important factor in adult ALL and demonstrates the utility of molecular methods for its accurate diagnosis.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of the BCR-ABL fusion gene in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a Cancer and Leukemia Group B Study (8762). 146 14
A novel biphenotypic leukemia cell line, NALM-29, was established from a 46-year-old Japanese male patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The primary leukemic blasts showed a common ALL phenotype with CD19+, CD10+, CD13-, HLA-DR+ and Igs-. NALM-29 cells display biphenotypic characteristics: expression of the intracellular enzyme myeloperoxidase at the mRNA and protein level and cell surface positivity for CD19,
CD10
, CD13, CD33 and HLA-DR. NALM-29 fulfills EGIL criteria as B-cell precursor (BCP) leukemia B-II type. NALM-29 cells have a lymphoblastic morphological appearance; the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene is rearranged. NALM-29 cells responded significantly to the proliferative stimuli of FLT-3 ligand and IL-7, but not to GM-CSF, IL-3, IL-6, PIXY-321 or SCF. Proliferation of cells was inhibited significantly by IL-4, TNF-alpha or TNF-beta treatment. Cytogenetic analysis revealed the characteristic t(9;22)(q34;q11); expression of the m-bcr e1-a2
BCR-ABL fusion
gene (typically found in ALL) was determined by PCR amplification of cDNA. The immunological, cytogenetic and functional characterization of NALM-29 suggests that this cell line may represent a scientifically significant in vitro model for BCP-type leukemia cells with biphenotypic characteristics.
...
PMID:A novel biphenotypic B-cell precursor leukemia cell line (NALM-29) carrying t(9;22)(q34;q11) established from a patient with acute leukemia. 1045 71
The
BCR-ABL fusion
, the molecular equivalent of the Philadelphia translocation, gains importance for treatment stratification in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In this prospective study, samples from 478 patients with
CD10
(+) B-cell precursor ALL (c-ALL and pre-B ALL) underwent BCR-ABL reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis with double testing of positive samples. Patients were stratified according to the PCR result and treated in 2 German Multicenter Trials of Adult ALL. The outcome was followed and the prognostic impact of BCR-ABL was compared to clinical risk features. Of the 478 samples, 432 had an evaluable BCR-ABL result. Thirty-seven percent of the c-ALL and pre-B ALL patients were BCR-ABL(+) (p190, 77%; p210, 20%; simultaneous p190/p210, 3%). BCR-ABL positivity was associated with the high-risk features of older age (45 years versus 30 years median age; P =.0001) and higher white blood cell counts (23 500/microL versus 11 550/microL; P =.0001). Univariate and multivariate analyses revealed BCR-ABL as the leading factor for a poor prognosis (P =.0001) in comparison to clinical risk criteria. Irrespective of the breakpoint, presence of any BCR-ABL transcript predicted a lower chance of initial treatment response (68.4% versus 84.6%; P =.001) and a lower probability of disease-free survival at 3 years (0.13 versus 0.47; P =.0001). This bad outcome was not influenced by postinduction high-dose treatment stratifications. The results show a high prevalence of
BCR-ABL fusion
transcripts with predominance of p190. BCR-ABL RT-PCR is confirmed as a sensitive, rapid method to diagnose t(9;22), and p190 and p210 are unequivocally demonstrated as the most important predictors of poor long-term survival despite intensified chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Leading prognostic relevance of the BCR-ABL translocation in adult acute B-lineage lymphoblastic leukemia: a prospective study of the German Multicenter Trial Group and confirmed polymerase chain reaction analysis. 1186 Dec 65