Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (CD10)
9,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty patients were treated with chemotherapy to mobilize progenitors into the blood. Peripheral blood stem cells were quantitated in peripheral blood or leukapheresis products using colony assays and flow cytometric measurement of CD34+ cells. In four patients where complete sets of serial samples were obtained, the appearance of CD34+ cells preceded the increase in CFU-GM by 24-48 h. Peak levels of CD34+ cells ranged from 0.6-5% and coincided with the peak increase in CFU-GM. Mobilized CD34+ cells contained subsets expressing CD33, CD13, CD45RA, CD38, HLA-DR, CD61 and CD41. Subsets of CD34+ cells expressing CD33, CD13, or CD45RA represent committed myeloid progenitors. In contrast to bone marrow CD34+ cells, few mobilized CD34+ cells expressed CD71, CD7, CD19 or CD10. Prompt engraftment of granulocytes greater than 500 x 10(6)/l at a median of 13 days and platelets greater than 50 x 10(9)/l at a median of 15 days was observed in patients reconstituted with mobilized cells. These data indicate that CD34+ cells mobilized during recovery from chemotherapy are predominantly myeloid in phenotype and contain few actively proliferating cells or cells with lymphoid phenotypes.
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PMID:Characterization of chemotherapy mobilized peripheral blood progenitor cells for use in autologous stem cell transplantation. 138

The immunophenotype of peripheral blood blast cells from six patients with acute myelofibrosis was studied using a panel of monoclonal antibodies directed against granulocytic, erythroid, megakaryocytic and lymphoid antigenic determinants. In all patients most of the blast cells were labeled with anti-HLA-DR and with the early myelomonocytic antibodies My7 (CD13), My9 (CD33) and B1-3C5 (CD34) (3/3). In three cases, platelet antibodies Edu3 (CD41) and GPIIIa (CD61) reacted with about 30% of blast cells. TdT was positive in two out of six samples studied. Lymphoid markers T3 (CD3), Leu9 (CD7), J5 (CD10), B4 (CD19) and B1 (CD20) were negative in all cases. These results suggest that blast cells are mainly of immature myelocytic origin. However, the coexistence of megakaryoblasts cannot be ruled out in the cases with a proportion of cells that are positive with Edu3 and GPIIIa antibodies.
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PMID:Immunophenotype of blast cells in acute myelofibrosis. 225 22

During the diagnostic investigation of 750 acute leukemias, nine cases were morphologically, cytochemically, and phenotypically undifferentiated. In seven of these cases the blasts were class II+, CD34+ and TdT+, in one were class II+, TdT+, CD7+ while in the remaining leukemia blasts expressed class II only. Cytoplasmic and membrane CD22, CD3, CD13, and Ig as well as membrane CD19, CD10, CD37, CD2, CD33, CD14, glycophorin C, and CD61 were absent. The further characterization of these rare leukemias yielded the following results. The TCR-beta, -gamma and -delta genes were in germline configuration in seven cases studied while IgH genes were rearranged on both alleles in two cases and germline in the other five. By ultrastructural analysis peroxidase activity was detected on unfixed cells in a minority of blasts from four of seven cases. In two of the peroxidase-positive cases a small proportion of blasts also reacted with an anti-myeloperoxidase monoclonal antibody. In one of the peroxidase-negative cases, 7% of blasts were labeled by the antibody, suggesting the presence of peroxidase in its proenzyme form. Importantly, the two cases with Ig gene rearrangements did not have cytochemically or immunologically detectable peroxidase. Three of the nine patients were treated as ALL while six received AML chemotherapy. In five patients complete remission was achieved while the other four died from infections during remission induction. Four patients are still in remission 7, 12, 24, and 30 months after diagnosis while one patient relapsed after 12 months. In conclusion, we have characterized the genotypic and ultrastructural features of subtype of acute leukemia in which blasts expressed immaturity markers and lacked lineage associated antigens. In contrast to previously reported "unclassifiable" cases, the leukemias were phenotypically homogeneous and showed a good response to chemotherapy.
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PMID:Phenotypic, genotypic, cytochemical, and ultrastructural characterization of acute undifferentiated leukemia. 239 82

In the past, studies on CD34+ cells have been based on the use of monoclonal antibodies conjugated with different fluorochromes that show different fluorescence intensity and yield variable results. Moreover, most of these studies have neither specifically focused on adult human BM samples nor have they used combinations to explore specifically the phenotype of myeloid committed CD34+ cells. The aim of the present study has been to characterize the normal human CD34+ precursor cells from adult BM in order to identify missing or extremely rare phenotypes that can be used for detecting minimal residual disease (MRD) in patients with AML. For this purpose we have utilized the fluorochrome conjugates that provide the most sensitive signals for identifying low antigenic expression, and the technique has been adapted to the characterization of cells present at very low frequencies. Normal human BM samples from 13 adult healthy volunteers have been analyzed using triple stainings at flow cytometry. The mean percentage of CD34+ cells detected was 0.72 +/- 0.33%; these cells displayed an heterogeneous light-scatter distribution. Most CD34+ cells coexpressed CD38 (96.7 +/- 5.7%), HLADR (81.6 +/- 14.0%), CD33 (84.7 +/- 18.3%), CD13 (84.6 +/- 16.2%) and CD71 antigens (65.5 +/- 9.1%). In addition, almost half of CD34+ cells were CD117+ (60 +/- 26.8%). Only a small proportion of CD34+ cells coexpressed CD4 (15.5 +/- 11.7%, CD36 (31.7 +/- 6.2%), CD61 (16.3 +/- 12.9%), CD41 (6.5 +/- 5.5%) or the lymphoid associated markers CD10 (18.6 +/- 11.8%) and CD19 (12.3 +/- 13.2%). Reactivity for the CD15 antigen was observed in a small population of CD34+HLADR+ cells (11.6 +/- 11.2%) although its intensity of expression was lower than that of the more mature granulocytic cells. No CD34+ cells displayed CD14, CD65, CD20, strong CD22, CD3 and CD56 antigens. Accordingly, most adult bone marrow CD34+ cells appeared to be committed to the myeloid lineage (CD13+/CD33+) and displayed an intermediate-to-large FSC/SSC while the lymphoid-committed CD34+ cells (CD19+, CD10+) were in a minority with low FSC/SSC values. By triple marker stainings several phenotypes of CD34+ precursor cells were found to be either undetectable or present at very low frequencies (< 1 x 10(-3)) in the normal human adult bone marrow. These data may be of great value for defining leukemia 'associated' phenotypes used to detect minimal residual disease in adult acute leukemia patients.
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PMID:Phenotypic analysis of CD34 subpopulations in normal human bone marrow and its application for the detection of minimal residual disease. 747 81

A strategy to phenotype rare populations of hematopoietic cells expressing the cell-surface marker CD34 was studied. The antigenic phenotype of umbilical core blood (CB) CD34+ cells was investigated using flow cytometry and compared with the mRNA-phenotype determined by cDNA-polymerase chain reaction (cDNA-PCR) analysis. The cDNA-PCR method allowed an mRNA evaluation of small numbers of cells. Monoclonal antibodies and oligonucleotide primers that recognize myeloid, lymphoid, erythroid and platelet/megakaryocytic cell membrane antigens or corresponding mRNA transcripts were used. Evaluation by flow cytometry showed that the vast majority of CD34+ CB cells coexpressed CD38, CD18, HLA-DR, and CD33. Rare subpopulations of CD34+CD38-, CD34+CD18-, CD34+HLA-DR-, and CD34+CD33- were also identified. A large proportion of CD34+ CB cells expressed CD13, CD45R, and to a lesser extent CD71. The CD36, CD51, and CD61 antigens were identified on a small number of CD34+ cells. The three-color flow cytometry analysis showed that CD34+ cells stained with antibodies to CD61 and CD36 or CD51 can be divided into subsets that may represent progenitor cells committed to the erythroid and/or megakaryocytic lineage. A variety of other lineage-specific cell-surface antigens including pre-T-cell marker CD7 and markers of early B cells, ie, CD10 and CD19, were not coexpressed with CD34+. Using the cDNA-PCR it was seen that the mRNA phenotype of a small number of sorted CD34+ cells (purity > 98%) was negative for the markers CD2, CD14, CD16, CD20, CD21, CD22, CD41b, and glycophorin A that are expressed on differentiated cells but positive for CD34, CD7, CD19, CD36, and CD61. The results suggest that circulating CD34+CD7+ and CD34+CD19+ CB cells cannot be distinguished by flow cytometry but can be detected by cDNA-PCR. This indicates that CB either contains very low numbers of these progenitors or that the antigen density of CD7 and CD19 on CD34+ cells is below the detection limit of the flow cytometer. In contrast to flow cytometry, cDNA-PCR allows the phenotypic analysis of cells even if their number is small. Thus, the cDNA-PCR method can be useful in linking phenotype analyses, ie, markers of differentiation, to studies on gene expression within rare populations of hematopoietic stem cells.
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PMID:Phenotype analysis of hematopoietic CD34+ cell populations derived from human umbilical cord blood using flow cytometry and cDNA-polymerase chain reaction. 751 40

To define an optimal regimen for mobilizing blood-derived progenitor cells from healthy donors for allogeneic transplantation, we have studied the early and lineage-committed CD34+ subsets in the leukapheresis products after mobilization with G-CSF (10 micrograms/kg/d), GM-CSF (10 micrograms/kg/d), and the combination of G-CSF and GM-CSF (G/GM, 5 micrograms/kg/d of each). We used three color and five dimensional flow cytometry with a panel of monoclonal antibodies against CD3, CD7, CD10, CD11b, CD15, CD33, CD34, CD38, CD45, CD61, and CD71. As reference, we also analyzed CD34+ subsets in samples from umbilical cord blood (UCB) and from adult bone marrow (BM). The level of total CD34+ cells was 0.04 +/- 0.03% (mean +/- SD) in peripheral blood at baseline, and reached a maximum on day 5 or day 6 of administration of growth factors. The percentages of CD34+ cells in the leukapheresis products were 1.06 +/- 0.37% (mean +/- SD) with G-CSF mobilization, 0.35 +/- 0.24% with GM-CSF, and 0.92 +/- 0.61% with the combination of both. Among the CD34+ subsets, the percentage of cells that were CD34+/CD38- was highest in UCB (7.18 +/- 5.58%) and lowest in G-CSF mobilized peripheral blood (0.80 +/- 0.22%), whereas GM-CSF or G/GM mobilized products gave rise to intermediate levels (4.43 +/- 3.40%, 3.61 +/- 2.42%, respectively). The differences between G/GM and G-CSF, between UCB and G-CSF, or between UCB and BM are significant. The absolute numbers of CD34+/CD38- and CD34+/CD38-/HLA-DR+ subsets are also significantly higher in the G/GM mobilized products than in G-CSF products. The cloning efficiency of G/GM mobilized CD34+ cells was 2 times higher than that of G-CSF mobilized CD34+ cells, albeit the difference was statistically marginal. The profile of CD34+ subsets mobilized by the combination of G/GM approaches that found in UCB. Our data illustrate that different growth factors and regimens can preferentially mobilize different CD34+ subsets from normal donors, and that the combination of G-CSF and GM-CSF might be an optimal regimen.
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PMID:Pluripotent and lineage-committed CD34+ subsets in leukapheresis products mobilized by G-CSF, GM-CSF vs. a combination of both. 895 Feb 28

Morphologic, immunologic, cytogenetic, and clinical features were studied in 9 cases of acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL). These patients were unclassifiable by FAB criteria, they were CD34+ and did not express myeloid- or lymphoid-associated antigens (CD13, CD33, CD14, CD15, CD61, CD19, CD10, CD22, CD7, CD2, CD5, CD3). Clonal abnormalities were seen in 8 of 9 cases. Del(5q) as the sole anomaly was observed in 3 cases; +13 was the primary change in 3 cases, and isolated trisomy 12 was found in 1 patient. A complex karyotype with trisomy 12q, in association with del 17p and trisomy 21q was detected in 1 case. One patient with 5q- relapsed with refractory anemia with excess of blasts; the presence of dysgranulopoiesis and a few blasts with possible monocytoid morphology in the remaining 2 patients point to a "myeloid nature" of these leukemias. Analysis of cytologic features in our 3 patients with +13, in combination with previously reported cases, suggests the occurrence of immature stem cell involvement with limited differentiation potential, possibly more along the myeloid than the lymphoid lineage. The significance of trisomy 12q in this subset of leukemia remains elusive; some clues of minimal differentiation towards the myeloid lineage in our cases are provided by positivity for the CD117 (c-kit) antigen and by relapse with acute myeloid leukemia without maturation (M1) in one patient. We conclude that, with presently available diagnostic techniques, AUL is a rare subset of leukemia, in which cytogenetic changes are confined to a few chromosomes, with prevalent involvement of 5q and of chromosomes 13 and 12. Chromosome findings may be of value in clinical practice, especially in those cases with "myeloid-oriented" karyotype.
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PMID:Cytogenetic and clinicobiological features of acute leukemia with stem cell phenotype: study of nine cases. 895 68

Immunophenotypic analysis of 285 newly diagnosed previously untreated, unselected, acute lymphoblastic leukaemia cases carried out at the Cancer Institute (W.I.A) in Madras reveals that 126 (44.2%) cases showed T-immunophenotype. The study was conducted using flow-cytometric immunofluorescent or immunoperoxidase methods using an extensive panel of monoclonal antibodies comprising CD1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 57, 19, 20 kappa, lambda, IgG, M, D, CIg, CD10, HLA-DR, CD13, 14, 33, 34 and CD61. The study group comprised 73 (57.9%) paediatric cases (<15 years) and 53 (42.1%) adult cases (>15 years). Based on their reactivity with various anti-T-cell monoclonal antibodies, all T-ALL cases were assigned to one of the intrathymic differentiation compartments. 56.2% of paediatric T-ALLs arise from intrathymic compartment II, 34.2% from compartment III and 9.6% from compartment I. Among adults, 45.3% arise from compartment I. 33.9% from compartment III and 20.8% from compartment II. The most frequently observed CD antigens in our study group are CD7, 5, 2 and 3. A correlative study of socioeconomic status reveals that 67.5% of T-ALL cases occurred among lower socioeconomic strata.
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PMID:Immunophenotypic analysis of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in Madras, India. 911 28

The initiation of hemodialysis using cuprophane membranes is followed by a rapid fall in the circulating neutrophil count. This neutropenia is caused by a transient sequestration of neutrophils in the lung due to homotypic aggregation, largely in response to generation of C5a by contact of plasma with the dialyzer. The transient nature of hemodialysis neutropenia is due to desensitization of neutrophils to stimulation by C5a, thus demonstrating desensitization in vivo. To examine the in vivo effects on surface phenotype of continuous exposure of neutrophils to C5a over 3 h, the surface expression of 22 antigens was examined by flow cytometry in patients undergoing dialysis. Neutropenia was prominent at 15 min and absent at 60 and 180 min of dialysis. CD10, CD11b, CD11c, CD13, CD18, CD35, CD45, CD66acde, and CD66b were upregulated at 15 min and remained upregulated at 180 min. CD61 and CD63 increased slightly at 15 min and returned to baseline by 180 min. CD16 and CD62L were down regulated at 15 min and normalized by 180 min. CD15s, CDw17, CD32, and CD44 were slightly down regulated at 15 min and then returned to baseline by 180 min. CD11a, CD15, CD24, CD31, and CDw65 did not change during dialysis. This study demonstrates the changes in surface phenotype of neutrophils during prolonged in vivo exposure to C5a over 3 h, during which time neutrophils become desensitized to subsequent stimulation by similar concentrations of C5a but maintain responsiveness to other chemotactic stimuli.
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PMID:Changes in neutrophil surface phenotype during hemodialysis. 982 71

Immunophenotypic studies have a limited role in the diagnosis of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) but are increasingly being used in CML blast transformation (BT). Determination of the cell lineage of CML blasts is clinically important because patients with lymphoid blast transformation have a better response to chemotherapy and longer survival than those with other lineages. We studied the morphologic, cytochemical, immunophenotypic, cytogenetic, and molecular features of 20 patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive CML and more than 10% blast cells in peripheral blood or bone marrow. The blasts were morphologically heterogeneous. CD33 was expressed in 19 cases (95%), followed by CD13 (85%), CD11c (80%), CD36 (60%), CD117 (40%), and CD15 (30%). Seven cases (35%) had a precursor-B lymphoid immunophenotype, and 13 (65%) had a predominantly myeloid immunophenotype. Of the former group, of which only one had a pure lymphoid phenotype, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) and CD19 were expressed in 100%, CD10 in 85.7%, and CD20 in 14.3%. Of the latter group, all 13 expressed from 3 to 6 myeloid antigens, with 46.2% myeloperoxidase positive and 69.2% CD61 positive. No cases were interpreted as T lineage, but the T-cell antigens CD3, CD4, CD5, and CD7 were expressed in 5.0, 40.0, 5.3. and 30.0% of all cases, respectively. In most cases, the immunophenotype of the CML blasts could not be predicted from their morphologic features. Polymerase chain reaction showed that 80.0% of the lymphoid group and 37.5% of the myeloid group had immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene rearrangements. The frequent lineage infidelity of the blast cells in CML BT seems to be related to the stem cell origin of this disorder. Such lineage infidelity, however, makes classification of many cases difficult and the significance of and criteria for biphenotypic blast crisis of CML is yet to be determined.
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PMID:The immunophenotype of blast transformation of chronic myelogenous leukemia: a high frequency of mixed lineage phenotype in "lymphoid" blasts and A comparison of morphologic, immunophenotypic, and molecular findings. 987 54


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