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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 diagnosis of primitive hematologic malignancies in extramedullary sites (lymphoblastic lymphoma of T- or B-cell type and myeloid sarcoma) on paraffin-embedded tissue sections is difficult and often impossible because of the primitive morphology of the neoplastic cells. The authors studied 21 extramedullary tumors of lymphoid or myeloid blasts. They used a panel of 22 antibodies on frozen sections and 9 antibodies on paraffin sections to determine the spectrum of immunophenotypes and to develop a practical panel for diagnosis. All but two of the cases could be classified as lymphoid or myeloid using immunohistologic analysis. Thirteen cases were classified as lymphoblastic lymphoma/acute lymphoblastic leukemia (LBL/ALL); 10 were classified as precursor T (CD7+, CD3+/-, CD45+) and 3 as precursor B-cell (CD19+/-CD10+CD45-) type. Five cases were classified as myeloid sarcoma (CD13+ myeloperoxidase+, lysozyme+). Two LBL/ALL coexpressed either CD33 (1 case) or CD15 (1 case), and one myeloid sarcoma coexpressed TdT and
CD7
. One case appeared to be truly mixed lineage, coexpressing CD3 with myeloperoxidase and lysozyme, and two cases expressed no lineage-specific antigens. There were clinical differences between the three major tumor types, and within the category of T-precursor LBL/ALL, classification according to stage of thymocyte differentiation was associated with distinctive clinical features. In conclusion, the spectrum of immunophenotypes detected on frozen section was similar to that reported by flow cytometry on peripheral blood and bone marrow specimens. The most useful antigens on frozen sections were
CD7
and CD3 (T cell),
CD10
and CD19 (B cell), and CD13 (myeloid). TdT was coexpressed by one myeloid sarcoma and was undetectable in 40% of LBL/ALL. On paraffin sections, myeloperoxidase and lysozyme were reliable markers of myeloid lineage, but none of the markers used on paraffin sections distinguished between LBL/ALL of T- and B-precursor types. Both B-LBL/ALL and myeloid sarcomas were often CD45- on paraffin sections, which may be a obstacle in determining the diagnosis. These distinctions appear to have clinical relevance.
...
PMID:Extramedullary tumors of lymphoid or myeloid blasts. The role of immunohistology in diagnosis and classification. 757 94
Important insights into leukocyte differentiation and the cellular origin of leukemias have been achieved by the use of monoclonal antibodies for the detection of cellular antigens with impact on the diagnosis and classification of hematological malignancies. A successful rapid immunoenzymatic technique using application of microwave irradiation (MIWI) on bone marrow cells of various children with ALL is described. The MIWI-stimulated immunotyping of acute leukemia cells with a panel of monoclonal antibodies against differentiation antigens (i.e. CD2,
CD7
,
CD10
, CD19, CD20, CD24, HLA-DR and TdT) has been compared with the conventional APAAP procedure developed by Mason et al 1983. The commercial microwave oven we used operates at 2.45 GHz. Fifteen sec irradiation at 350 W during all incubation steps produced excellent color reactions with Fast Red TR and Fast Blue BB similar to the conventional immunoenzymatic method. The results so far have demonstrated that the application of the MIWI-technique eliminates the need for long incubation periods without loss of sensitivity. With this technique an immunological diagnosis of childhood leukemia cells is possible using air dried smears in an microwave oven within 30 minutes.
...
PMID:Rapid immunodiagnosis of childhood leukemia using microwave-stimulated APAAP-complex system. 765 5
To get more insight into the phenotypic changes of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) at relapse, a detailed morphological and immunophenotypic study in 40 childhood ALL cases (32 precursor B-ALL and 8 T-ALL) was performed. Expression patterns of non-lineage specific markers (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT), CD34, and HLA-DR), B-lineage markers (
CD10
, CD19, CD20, and CD22), T-lineage markers (CD1, CD2, CD3, CD4, CD5,
CD7
, and CD8), and cross-lineage myeloid markers (CD14, CD15, and CD33) were compared at diagnosis and relapse. In case of low blast counts (< or = 70%) at relapse, double labeling for membrane markers and TdT was used in order to define the precise immunophenotype of the TdT+ leukemic cells. An immunological marker-shift was defined as either a conversion from positive to negative and vice versa or a difference in positivity of > or = 50%. Morphological differences between diagnosis and relapse were detected in 34% of precursor B-ALL and 14% of T-ALL. Differences in immunological marker expression were found in 72% of precursor B-ALL and in 75% of T-ALL, and generally concerned minor shifts with loss or acquisition of a few markers. The morphological shifts and immunophenotypic shifts were not correlated. Immunophenotypic shifts were found for all markers tested in precursor B-ALL, except for HLA-DR. Shifts in
CD10
expression (16% of cases) were only observed in relapses occurring 30 months or more after diagnosis. In four precursor B-ALL an intra-lineage shift was found at relapse (one common ALL to null ALL and three pre-B-ALL to common ALL or null ALL) and two precursor B-ALL cases were diagnosed as acute non-lymphocytic leukemia at relapse based on morphology and immunophenotype. In T-ALL, neither intra-lineage nor inter-lineage shifts were observed, although shifts were detected in all T cell markers tested, except for the lineage specific CD3 and T cell receptor (TcR) markers. In conclusion, immunophenotypic shifts at relapse frequently occur in precursor B-ALL and T-ALL, in a small percentage leading to an intra-lineage shift (10%) or inter-lineage shift (5%). Therefore immunophenotypic monitoring of minimal residual disease in ALL patients should be based on multiple marker combinations, preferably together with polymerase chain reaction analysis of rearranged immunoglobulin and/or TcR genes or chromosome aberrations.
...
PMID:Immunophenotypic changes between diagnosis and relapse in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 765 22
Human cord blood or bone marrow cells expressing the CD34 surface antigen include a population of pluripotent progenitors. We identified and isolated a subpopulation of cells coexpressing CD34 and c-kit, a transmembrane receptor with tyrosine kinase activity. Novel monoclonal antibodies (16A6, 14A3, 3D6) directed against the extracellular domain of c-kit were used for immunofluorescence labeling and sorting of low-density mononuclear cells (MNCs) from umbilical cord blood and bone marrow. The frequency of c-kit-labeled MNCs from cord blood (mean 5.0% +/- 2.1%, n = 16) was similar to that from adult bone marrow (mean 3.7% +/- 1.3%, n = 4). On average, 1.4% of CD34-positive cells were recorded in cord blood and 2.1% in bone marrow MNCs. Roughly 60% of CD34-positive cells coexpressed c-kit. The ability of CD34+/c-kit+ cells to form multilineage colonies (CFU-GEMM) was assayed after sorting with an antibody that did not show any significant effect on c-kit ligand (RL) or granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-induced colony formation. For CD34+/c-kit+ cells, we found a 20- to 50-fold enrichment as against total MNCs, and a 2-fold enrichment if compared with the CD34+/c-kit-population. To study expression of c-kit in lymphocytic precursors, monoclonal anti-
CD7
or anti-
CD10
antibodies were used simultaneously. In contrast to CD34-expressing cells, however, no consistent double-labeled subpopulation of lymphocytic cells was detected. Furthermore, coexpression of CD38 (73% +/- 14%, n = 4) or CD33 (29% +/- 12%, n = 5) on a majority of c-kit-positive cells showed their lineage commitment to erythropoiesis and granulocytopoiesis.
...
PMID:Characterization of hemopoietic cell populations from human cord blood expressing c-kit. 767 90
A portion of patients with acute myeloid leukemia also display surface antigens associated with lymphoid development (Ly+AML). The incidence of Ly+AML varies considerably between independent studies, both overall and with regard to individual antigens. On average, lymphoid-associated antigen expression is relatively low in AML. The reasons for some striking differences between conflicting reports are not clear, but are most probably due to various technical aspects including several arbitrary parameters. The data accumulated from the literature lead to the following conclusions: (i) use of different reagents against the CD surface antigens, different positive/negative cut-off levels, analysis of fresh or frozen cell material and variable sensitivities of the analytical instruments (expression of lymphoid-associated antigens was commonly weaker than myeloid-associated markers) seriously influence the results; (ii) most antigens (CD1, CD2, CD3, CD5, CD8,
CD10
, CD19, CD20, CD21, CD22) were expressed on less than 10% of AML cases; (iii) the CD4 and
CD7
antigens, also found on normal monocytic and immature myeloid progenitor cells, were detected in 24% and 15% of AML cases, and their expression correlated with FAB M4/M5 and M1/M2 morphology, respectively; (iv) differences between pediatric and adult Ly+AML were restricted to CD4 and CD19 expression being detected more often in childhood cases; (v) there is no cytogenetic anomaly specific for Ly+AML; anomalies exclusively associated with lymphoid malignancies were not seen; aberrations involving 11q23, 14q32, and the 9;22 translocation seem to be increased; (vi) in most studies, expression of lymphoid-associated antigens (with the exception of
CD7
) on AML blasts lacked prognostic significance; CD7+AML appears to be a particular subset of malignant myeloid progenitors. In summary, these findings suggest that in general, Ly+AML may not represent a biologically distinct form of leukemia as these cases have similar clinical features and respond to therapy in a comparable manner.
...
PMID:Acute myeloid leukemias expressing lymphoid-associated antigens: diagnostic incidence and prognostic significance. 768 17
CD34+ cells, present at a frequency of 0.18 +/- 0.052% among leukocytes from peripheral blood (PB), can be rapidly and efficiently (recovery of 39.0-74.0%) enriched to a frequency of 38.6-87.1% (54.4 +/- 12.3%) by high-gradient magnetic cell separation (MACS) for immunophenotyping, characterization in colony-forming cell (CFU) assays, and further purification to homogeneity (> 98%) by multiparameter fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). Enriching PB-CD34+ cells for immunophenotyping allows the detection of small subpopulations, expressing the B-cell antigens
CD10
, CD19, and CD20, the T-cell antigens CD45RA and
CD7
, and a small subpopulation expressing high levels of CD34 (1.20 +/- 0.12%), which mostly coexpress CD19 (91.9 +/- 9.05%), CD20 (64.8 +/- 14.4%), and CD38 (84.5 +/- 10.3%). All PB-CD34+ cells express elevated levels of CD71 (transferrin receptor), with a subpopulation of high expressing cells, and CD38. Some cells express CD33. MACS-enriched PB-CD34+ cells show "normal" hematopoietic colony formation in vitro. The ease and efficiency of purification of large numbers of CD34+ cells from PB by MACS is not only relevant for the characterization of migrating stem cells but also opens new possibilities for stem cell transplantation and genetic manipulation of the hematopoietic system.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells from human peripheral blood by high-gradient magnetic cell sorting. 768 79
It has been proposed that the CD7 molecule is the first antigen expressed on the membrane of cells committed to the T-cell lineage during human fetal T-cell ontogeny. To further identify the pre-T cell subpopulation that migrates to the thymus early in ontogeny, we analyzed the phenotypic and functional characteristics of the fetal liver populations separated on the basis of
CD7
expression. Three populations expressing different levels of
CD7
were observed: CD7bright, CD7dull, and
CD7
-. A CD7bright population depleted of mature T, B, and myeloid cells (lineage negative, lin-) and mostly composed of CD56+ CD34- natural killer cells did not mature into T cells in a fetal thymic organ culture (FTOC) assay and was devoid of myeloid progenitors in a clonal colony-forming cell assay. In contrast, the
CD7
-/dull CD34+ lin- populations were capable of differentiating into phenotypically mature T cells after injection into FTOC and contained early myeloid progenitors. Here we phenotypically compared the fetal liver
CD7
populations with the most immature fetal thymic subset that differentiated in the FTOC assay, namely the triple negative (TN, CD3-CD4-CD8-) thymocytes. Fetal TN lin- expressed high levels of CD34 marker and were further subdivided by their expression of CD1 antigen, because CD1- TN thymocytes express higher levels of CD34 antigen compared with CD1+ TN cells. CD1- lin -TN thymocytes are characterized by expressing high levels of CD2,
CD7
, and CD34 markers and dull levels of CD5,
CD10
, and CD28 molecules. We could not find fetal liver pre-T cells with a phenotype equivalent to that of TN thymocytes. Our data show that
CD7
does not necessarily identify T-cell precursors during fetal T-cell development and strongly support the hypothesis that the acquisition of early T-cell markers as CD2, CD28, and CD5 molecules on the cell surface of T-cell progenitors takes place intrathymically.
...
PMID:Phenotypic and functional analysis of T-cell precursors in the human fetal liver and thymus: CD7 expression in the early stages of T- and myeloid-cell development. 769 84
We investigated the phenotypes of blast cells of 53 patients with acute leukemia by a modified streptavidin-biotin alkaline phosphatase (SAB-AP) labeling technique, using a panel of monoclonal antibodies [MoAb; anti-CD11b, CD13, CD14, CD33, CD34, CD41, CD3,
CD7
,
CD10
, CD19, anti-HLA-DR, and anti-myeloperoxidase (MPO)]. The selection of an optimal fixative solution for each antigen from five options of various combinations of formalin, acetone, methanol, and/or ethanol, successfully conserved cell morphology and improved specific reaction compared with the conventional methods which used a single fixative for multiple antigens. We compared the SAB-AP results with those obtained by flow cytometry (FCM) for surface markers in each case. High concordance rates for both positive and negative results were observed for each marker. However, positive reaction for some markers (anti-CD13, CD14, CD33, and CD34) were often noted only in the cytoplasm by the SAB-AP method, indicating that combination of these two methods is essential for the precise immunophenotyping of poorly differentiated leukemia cells.
...
PMID:Usefulness of immunocytochemistry for phenotypical analysis of acute leukemia; improved fixation procedure and comparative study with flow cytometry. 771 39
Clinical and cytologic characteristics were correlated to immunologic markers in 154 patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The panel of monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) was selected to identify differentiation-associated antigens of both the myeloid and the lymphoid lineages (CD13, CD33, CD14, CD15,
CD7
, CD34,
CD10
, HLA-DR, CD19, CD2, CD5, TdT). The expression of multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (P-170) was also evaluated in 117 patients. Differences in antigenic expression was observed among the various French-American-British (FAB) subgroups. HLA-DR was poorly expressed on the blasts of acute promyelocytic leukemia (M3), and was always found in FAB M5. CD34 was detectable in all M0 cases and only in one M3 (p < 0.001). Lymphoid-associated antigens were positive in 74 cases (48.1%). In particular,
CD7
was found in 49 patients (31.8%), and TdT in 30 (21.3%), 15 samples displaying coexpression of these two antigens. The incidence of CD7+ cases was particularly elevated in M0 and M5 AML (p = 0.005). It significantly correlated with the expression of CD34, HLA-DR, P-170 (p < 0.001, p = 0.018 and p = 0.034 respectively), and with a leukocyte count > 50 x 10(9)/l (p = 0.038). Sixty-nine (59%) samples demonstrated P-170 positivity. Again, this phenotype was particularly expressed in the poorly differentiated forms (M5, M0 and M1) and showed significant correlation with the immaturity markers CD34,
CD7
and HLA-DR (p = 0.013, p = 0.022 and p = 0.001, respectively). Expression of individual antigens correlated with prognosis. Refractoriness to first line therapy was associated with
CD7
expression (p = 0.002) and P-170 (p = 0.001). The
CD7
marker was also significantly associated with a very low overall survival (p < 0.001) and continuous complete remission (p < 0.001). CD14 expression also significantly predicted lower survival rates (p = 0.033). The combination (CD7+ CD14+) identified a subset of patients with a particularly adverse outcome. The prognostic value of
CD7
expression, alone or in combination with other markers, was confirmed in multivariate analysis.
...
PMID:Prognostic value of cell marker analysis in de novo acute myeloid leukemia. 790 93
To date no hematopoietic progenitors of dendritic Langerhans' cells (DLC), which represent an highly efficient class of antigen presenting cells, have been identified or the cytokines they elaborate have been defined. Here we describe an acute leukemia patient whose blasts (90-96% in peripheral blood and bone marrow) had a phenotype consistent with putative progenitors of DLC. The patient was treated with ara-C and VP-16 but did not achieve remission. The blasts had lobulated nuclei, no cytoplasmic vacuolation or Auer rods and were weakly positive for acid phosphatase and non-specific esterase and negative for PAS, granzyme A, dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV, ATPase/ADPase and lysozyme production. The blasts were positive for CD1a, CD4, CD16, CD35, HLADR, HLADQ, CD11b, CD11c, CD14, CD33, CD34, CD11a, CD71, CD19, CD25, IL-2R beta and negative for CD2,
CD7
, CD8,
CD10
, CD22, CD56, CD57, surface or cytoplasmic CD3, TCR delta and TCR beta, HTLV-1p19 and P-glycoprotein. On liquid culture with or without 5 x 10(-9) M 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) for 3 days, the blasts formed aggregates of proliferating and elongating cells on the wall of the flasks with a decline in CD34, numerous dendritic processes appeared on the cells and there was strong positivity for ATPase/ADPase, but no other changes in phenotype. No macrophages were observed, indicating derivation from separate DLCs. Cytogenetic analysis showed chromosomal abnormalities and electron microscopy showed Birbeck granules. Southern blotting of DNA showed rearrangement of one allele for both JH and TCR beta but no HTLV-1 related sequences. Culture supernatants from blasts cultured with or without TPA showed the production of large amounts of IL-8, IL-6, TNF-alpha, MIP-1 alpha, IL-10 and interferon gamma and modest amounts of IL-1 alpha, GM-CSF and stem cell factor. The presence not only of CD1a, HLADR, HLADQ and many other characteristics including Birbeck granules, but also differentiation along the lines of DLC with appearance of dendritic processes on the cells and expression of ATPase/ADPase activity, indicate that the leukemic blasts in our patient represented a leukemic counterpart of normal progenitors of DLC and the leukemia a new entity which could possibly be classified as AML-M8. Lastly, many pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by DLC could contribute to inflammation and IL-10 to immunosuppression.
...
PMID:Phenotype, genotype and cytokine production in acute leukemia involving progenitors of dendritic Langerhans' cells. 791 55
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