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)

Over a period of 3-1/2 years, 86 cases of acute leukemia were analyzed by immunohistochemical (IHC) means on ficoll separated cytospin preparations of peripheral blood and/or bone marrow samples. Antibodies included in the panel were specific against Tdt, HLA-DR, CD19/CD20/CD22, CALLA (CD10), CD2, CD11C as well as against Ig heavy chains. Of 86 cases analyzed, 48 cases were of ALL, (25 of common pre-B ALL, 15 of pre-B/NULL and 8 of T ALL phenotype), twenty-four (24) out of 86 cases were of non-lymphoblastic (AML/AMML) type. In six cases, there was suggestion of a mixed lineage, while in 8 cases there was inconclusive diagnosis. Mean age was lower in common ALL sub-set of ALL as compared to pre-B/NULL group (i.e., 8 vs 12 years), while in non-lymphoblastic group it was 36 years. T cell phenotype was invariably seen in young adults, who usually presented with a mediastinal mass.
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PMID:Classification and immunophenotyping of acute leukemias: a prospective study. 914 37

Over a time period of five years leukemic blast samples from 141 consecutive patients with adult ALL were referred to our laboratory, for molecular evaluation of chromosome abnormalities. The t(9;22), t(4;11) and t(1;19) which are most commonly found in adult ALL with a B-precursor phenotype were molecularly analyzed by similar RT-PCR based protocols. BCR-ABL transcripts generated by the t(9;22) translocation were demonstrated in 36 patients (25%) and were restricted to the 109 patients with B precursor ALL (33% of this group). Of 83 patients showing a, common phenotype (CD10+), 34 were BCR-ABL positive (41%) whereas only 2 out of 26 with Null ALL (HLADr+, CD19+, CD10) were positive. Interestingly, the percent of BCR-ABL positive CD1O+ ALL increases significantly with age being 20% in patients less than 30 years old and more than 50% in older patients. None of the T-ALL (24 patients) and B-ALL (8 patients) were positive. The majority of cases (67%) showed the p190 gene subtype. The cytogenetic diagnosis of Philadelphia chromosome was always confirmed by the molecular analysis and this approach allowed for the detection of the presence of the BCR-ABL rearrangement in 26 patients when a negative result or no metaphases were obtained. The complete remission rate was similar among BCR-ABL positive and negative patients but a shorter remission duration was observed in those showing molecular evidence of t(9;22) and this finding was significantly evident in CD1O+ ALL patients. By means of comparison, in most of the same adult ALL patients, we analyzed the yet unrecognized prevalence of the t(4;11) and t(1;19) translocations by the molecular analysis of their chromosomal breakpoints. Rearrangements of the ALL-1 gene on 11q23 band and ALL- l1AF.4 fusion transcripts specific for the t(4;11) were demonstrated in 7 out of the 21 Null ALL investigated, with no additional positive cases found among the other ALL subgroups. Overall the clinical behavior of t(4; 11) positive patients was dismal with a very short CR duration. Chimeric E2A-PBX1 transcripts generated by the t(1;19) were found in only two of the 87 B-precursor ALL analyzed. The presented results provide further evidence for the utility of RT-PCR based methods for the molecular diagnosis of chromosome translocations in ALL. The identification of such abnormalities can significantly contribute to the identification of more appropriate therapeutic options for standard and high risk ALL patients
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PMID:Molecular diagnosis and clinical relevance of t(9;22), t(4;11) and t(1 ;19) chromosome abnormalities in a consecutive group of 141 adult patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 917 11

In our laboratory, a two-step procedure is used for purging precursor B ALL from autologous bone marrow grafts of children in second bone marrow remission. An immunorosette depletion method with CD19 and CD22 MAbs is followed by one cycle of complement-mediated cell lysis with CD9 and CD10 MAbs. The aim of the present study was to determine if the efficacy of this procedure could be further enhanced by including CD20 and CD72 MAbs in the current protocol. Leukemia-contaminated remission bone marrow was simulated by mixing cell line cells and normal bone marrow cells. The efficacy of purging of malignant cells was determined by culturing the cells in a limiting dilution assay. The effect of including CD20 and CD72 in the immunorosette depletion was limited. In contrast, when these MAbs were added during complement-mediated cell lysis, a significant increase in depletion of tumor cells was observed. This was true when complement lysis was carried out alone (0.4 versus 3.0 log depletion for Ros cells) and when it was preceded by immunorosette depletion (2.7 versus 4.1 log depletion for Ros cells). The loss of hematopoietic progenitor cells was not greater than with the current purging protocol.
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PMID:Optimization of purging of autologous bone marrow grafts for children with precursor B acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 936 86

The pathogenesis and clinical features of chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) resemble those of several autoimmune diseases, as evidenced by frequent dermal, hepatic, occular, oral, pulmonary, gastrointestinal and neuromuscular involvement. Serosal involvement, however, has only rarely been reported and most of the existing accounts are historical. We describe a boy transplanted in third CR of CALLA-positive ALL from his HLA-identical sister who developed cGVHD, which was complicated by a huge pericardial effusion as a part of severe polyserositis including pleural effusion, ascites, and polyarthritis. The patient shared the HLA antigens HLA-A2, B51, and DQW6 which are associated with autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Massive pericardial effusion complicating the course of chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) in a child with acute lymphoblastic leukemia following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 938 88

This study reports the immunophenotypic features of a series of 62 selected acute leukemia patients with increased incidence of argyrophilic proteins (AgNORs) at the time of initial diagnosis. Peripheral blood and bone marrow cells of patients with T-ALL, B-precursor ALL and AML were studied. The method of silver staining was used to determine the number of AgNORs per cell. Cell surface markers were detected by a standard immunofluorescence assay. To demonstrate the relationship between AgNOR quantity and cell proliferation, the expression of activation and proliferation antigens CD38 and CD71 was investigated. To characterize the immunophenotype and the discrete stages of differentiation, the wide panel of antibodies against lymphoid, myeloid and non-lineage specific antigens was used. The number of AgNORs at diagnosis ranged from 3.05 to 6.70. Immunophenotypic analysis showed a variation in CD38 and CD71 expression among different leukemia subtypes. CD71 antigen was more expressed in T-ALL than in B-precursor ALL or in AML. Notable was the relationship between increased AgNOR quantity and antigens that characterize the immaturity of leukemic cells. The association with CD7, CD2, CD5 (without CD3 membrane expression) and CD34 in T blasts was evident. High positivity of CD19, CD10, CD34 and HLA-DR in relation to the increased amount of AgNORs in B-lineage ALL was observed. The vast majority of AML patients with high numbers of AgNORs simultaneously expressed CD13, CD33, CD34 and HLA-DR. One third of AML cases coexpressed T cell marker CD7. In conclusion, the presence of increased numbers of AgNORs at diagnosis might reflect the dependence on an early stage of leukemia cell differentiation.
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PMID:The relationship between argyrophilic proteins and some immunophenotypic markers in acute leukemia cells. 960 7

Phenotypic changes in neutrophil granulocytes (NG) after G-CSF have been scarcely studied. Using flow cytometry, we analyzed the changes of CD11b, CD14, CD33, CD71, HLA-DR, CD10, CD16 and CD15 on NG after G-CSF treatment in 6 patients with ALL receiving intensification chemotherapy and in 10 control subjects. After G-CSF we found: expression of HLA-DR, a higher expression of CD11b, CD71 and CD14, a decrease in CD10 positivity, and fluoresence Intesity in CD15 and CD16. After administration of G-CSF, the NG of patients with ALL express an immature phenotype as well as markers of proliferation.
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PMID:Phenotypic changes in neutrophil granulocytes after G-CSF administration in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia under chemotherapy. 967 35

A large number of continuous human leukemia cell lines have been established over the last three decades. Clearly, leukemia cell lines have become important research tools. Here, we have summarized the immunological, molecular and standard cytogenetic features of a panel of well characterized B cell precursor (BCP)-leukemia cell lines which were derived from patients with acute lymphoblastic/undifferentiated leukemia (ALL/AUL) or chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in blast crisis. Following the recently proposed immunological EGIL classification, we assigned our panel of 27 BCP-cell lines to one of the following categories: B-I pro-B cell line; B-II common-B cell line; and B-III pre-B cell line. All cell lines express general B-lineage associated surface markers (HLA-DR, CD22, CD79a) being negative for surface immunoglobulin (Ig); the differences between the subgroups reside in expression of CD10 and cytoplasmic Ig. Several BCP-cell lines show the myelomonocytic cell-associated markers CD13 and/or CD33. These immunologically 'biphenotypic' BCP-cell lines are generally TdT+ CD10+ CD13+ CD19+ CD22+ CD34+ and carry the Philadelphia (Ph) translocation. The BCP-cell lines display surface receptors for interferon-gamma (CD119), interleukin-7 (CD127) and FLT-3 ligand (CD135). All BCP-cell lines examined have complex numerical and structural chromosomal alterations including translocations commonly seen in BCP-ALL such as t(4;11), t(9;22), t(11;19), t(12;21), and t(17;19) involving the fusion genes MLL-AF4, BCR-ABL, ENL-MLL, TEL/ETV6-AML1 and E2A-HLF, respectively. Besides the expected rearrangement of the Ig heavy chain receptor gene, several cell lines also have rearrangements of the T cell receptor genes beta, gamma or delta. While some BCP-cell lines express (aberrantly) myeloperoxidase at the mRNA level, most lines are negative in the immunological or cytochemical staining. Several large series documented the difficulty in establishing such BCP cell lines with success rates in the range of 10-20% (on average 15%). Still, since the establishment of the first bonafide BCP-cell line in 1974 (cell line REH), some 150 cell lines have been established of which, however, only a small percentage have been sufficiently well characterized and described. A higher success rate for immortalizing any given leukemia cell might depend on a closer emulation of the physiological in vivo microenvironment. The possibility to grow in vitro leukemia cells at will would represent ideal experimental systems permitting basic research and patient-specific investigations. In summary, the use of well-characterized BCP-cell lines provide unprecedented opportunities for studying a multitude of biological aspects related to normal and neoplastic B-lymphocytes.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of human B cell precursor-leukemia cell lines. 968 Jan 6

CD66c is a surface (and intracellular) molecule bound to the membrane by a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor. While its expression on peripheral granulocytes is well recognized, less is known about its distribution in early steps of normal and neoplastic hematopoiesis. We analyzed by flow cytometry cell surface expression of CD66c on bone marrow cells from 4 healthy subjects and on bone marrow or peripheral blood cells from 127 patients with newly diagnosed hematologic malignancies: 70 de novo acute myeloid leukemias (AML), 6 refractory anemias with excess of blasts in transformation, 3 myeloid and 3 lymphoid blastic phases of chronic myelogenous leukemia, 33 B-lineage and 6 T-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemias (B- and T-ALL), and 3 B-cell and 3 T-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas in the leukemic phase. We found that in normal bone marrow CD66c expression was myeloid restricted, reaching its highest level on promyelocytes. As for de novo AML, slight expression of CD66c was found on 6/25 (24%) AML-M4 and only occasionally in other subgroups. In 9 out of 10 cases of acute promyelocytic leukemia, CD66c was totally absent, but antigen expression was easily detectable following in vitro exposure to all-trans retinoic acid. Among lymphoid malignancies, CD10+ early-B-ALL consistently expressed the molecule (20/23 cases, or 87%) whereas both CD10- early-B ALL and SmIg+ B-ALL completely lacked it. Finally, dual staining with CD66c and CD10 proved to be a suitable tool for distinguishing even low percentages of residual leukemic cells (CD10+/CD66c+) from normal regenerating early-B cells (CD10+/CD66c ) in CD10+ early-B-ALL induced into remission.
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PMID:CD66c antigen expression is myeloid restricted in normal bone marrow but is a common feature of CD10+ early-B-cell malignancies. 971 68

The prognosis of infant ALL, characterized by a high incidence of the immature CD10 negative B-lineage ALL (proB ALL) is poor. This study aimed to determine the resistance profile of infant ALL cells. In vitro drug resistance was determined by the MTT assay of 395 children with ALL at initial diagnosis: there were 21 infants <1.5 years of which nine <1 year, 284 children aged 1.5-10 years (intermediate age group) and 90 children >10 years. Immunophenotyping resulted in 310 cALL/preB ALL, 69 T-ALL, 15 proB ALL and one unknown cases. The following drugs were tested: daunorubicin, doxorubicin, mitoxantrone, idarubicin (Ida), prednisolone (Pred), dexamethasone (DXM), vincristine (VCR), Asparaginase (Asp), 6-MP, 6-TG, AraC, VM26 and 4-HOO-ifosfamide (Ifos). Infants <1.5 years were significantly more resistant to Pred (>500-fold), Asp (11-fold) and VM26 (2.7-fold) but significantly more sensitive to Ara-C (2.3-fold) compared to the intermediate age group. When analyzing infants <1 year of age similar results were found. ProB ALL cells (seven infants <1.5 years; eight children >1.5 years) were significantly more resistant to glucocorticoids, Asp, thiopurines, anthracyclines and Ifos compared to cALL/preB ALL but more sensitive to Ara-C. Cells from children >10 years were significantly more resistant to Pred, DXM, Asp, Ida and 6-MP. T-ALL cells showed a strong resistance to Pred, Asp and VCR and a mild but significant resistance to all other drugs except thiopurines and VM26. We conclude that the poor prognosis of infant ALL is associated with a resistance to glucocorticoids and Asp. However, ALL cells from infants show a relatively high sensitivity to Ara-C which suggests that infants with ALL might benefit from treatment schedules that incorporate more Ara-C than the current treatment protocols.
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PMID:Relation between age, immunophenotype and in vitro drug resistance in 395 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia--implications for treatment of infants. 973 81

We recently investigated samples of pediatric B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) and normal bone marrow (BM). We found that leukemic blasts, compared to their physiologic counterpart cells, frequently display aberrant phenotypes with respect to levels of expression of certain antigens. Using multiparameter flow cytometry, these differences enabled us to trace leukemic cells admixed to normal BM, which suggested that this approach might be a useful strategy for minimal residual disease detection. In the present study, we used the same multiparameter approach ("comparative phenotype mapping") to prove that such quantitative phenotypic differences really exist between malignant and normal BCP when simultaneously present in the BM. We demonstrate this by five exemplary follow-up BM samples from patients with BCP-ALL, all of which showed phenotypically aberrant cells according to levels of expression of CD10, CD11a, CD19, CD34, CD44, or CD45RA, as well as according to altered orthogonal light scattering properties. We confirmed the leukemic nature of these cells by polymerase chain reaction-based detection of bcr1/abl transcripts, and of leukemia clone-specific immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangements in only the suspicious cells when sorted by flow cytometry, but not in normal BCP or non-B cells. Comparative phenotype mapping thus allows one to distinguish between normal and leukemic cells, and we show that it may enable rapid, specific, and quantitative detection of residual/resurgent leukemia in BCP-ALL.
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PMID:Detection of residual disease in pediatric B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia by comparative phenotype mapping: a study of five cases controlled by genetic methods. 1021 Mar 25


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