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: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Burkitt's lymphoma occurs mainly in parts of tropical Africa and has attracted the attention of experimental workers due to its epidemiological and clinical features, which indicate a viral etiology and a host immune response to the tumor. As a result of virological studies, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA has been demonstrated in almost all tested biopsies of African BL. This contrasts to the absence of EBV in all, or almost all, of the non-
African Burkitt's lymphoma
-like tumors, even though the number of tested tumors in this group is small, and to the lack of EBV in all other types of lymphoma or
leukemia
. Immunological studies have revealed the presence of antibodies to different EBV-associated antigens in all African patients with Burkitt's lymphoma. However the antibodies are not specific for Burkitt's lymphoma but are found in most adults all over the world, although at lower levels. They cannot therefore serve diagnostic purposes, but they can give prognostic information and occasionally give clues to the mechanisms behind late tumor recurrences, and possibly guide so-called immunotherapy. Burkitt's lymphoma patients contrast to appropriate control groups where some of the persons are anti-EBV seronegative, and this, together with the presence of EBV in Burkitt's lymphoma biopsies and the absence of EBV in other lymphomas, even though the cell type involved may be infectable by EBV in vitro and the tumor may arise in an EBV-carrying person, favors an etiological role in EBV in Burkitt's lymphoma and speaks against the "passenger" hypothesis, according to which EBV is picked up by the Burkitt's lymphoma cell which happens to be particularly suitable for EBV persistence. To explain the geographical distribution, a cofactor, such as certain forms of malaria, has been implied.
...
PMID:Burkitt's lymphoma - a human tumor model system for immunological studies. 17 35
An Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-negative lymphoblastoid cell line (LCL), BJA-B, was established from an
African Burkitt's lymphoma
(BL) which contained no detectable EBV DNA and did not express the EBV specified antigen EBNA, BJA-B cells grow in typically large, flat clumps. All carry surface-bound immunoglobulins, a B lymphocyte marker, and do not form rosettes with sheep erythrocytes. After infection of BJA-B cells by EBV the infected cells may produce either EBV-determined nuclear antigen (EBNA) or both EBNA and early antigen (EA), depending on the strain of EBV. The homogeneity of the BJA-B cell population with respect to immunological and isoenzyme markers and size suggests a clonal origin of the line. BJA-B is the first EBV-negative LCL established from an
African Burkitt's lymphoma
and demonstrates that an EBV-independent continuous B cell line can be established "in vitro" from other than
leukemia
or myeloma cells.
...
PMID:Establishment and characterization of an Epstein-Barr virus (EBC)-negative lymphoblastoid B cell line (BJA-B) from an exceptional, EBV-genome-negative African Burkitt's lymphoma. 17 29
Eight British adults with tumours histologically and cytochemically identical to
African Burkitt's lymphoma
are described. In each case there was an acute clinical onset and similar tumour distribution, with involvement of the intra-abdominal organs, bone marrow and central nervous system. Jaw tumours were only present in 3 cases, and were never gross. Four patients presented as acute
leukaemia
. Combination chemotherapy and cranial irradiation were used to eradicate disease, but complete remissions were obtained in only 3 patients, and survival of over 1 year in only 2. The remainder died with disease present, less than 5 months from diagnosis.
...
PMID:Burkitt's lymphoma in British adults: clinical features and response to chemotherapy. 86 86
In this paper, we emphasize the uses of serum banks in cancer research. These include not only case/control studies but also prospective seroepidemiological studies in which the development of a serological marker, such as a viral antibody or viral antigen, can be correlated with the subsequent development of cancer in either an active surveillance program or the use of cancer registries or hospital records. Several different methods of application of the cohort technique are illustrated by studies of hepatitis B antigen and hepatocellular carcinoma and of Epstein-Barr virus in relation to
African Burkitt's lymphoma
, Hodgkin's lymphoma, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Collections of sera done for one purpose can often be utilized for another purpose, if properly stored and documented. Two examples are tests for human T-cell
leukemia
virus, type 1, antibody from sera done for a health survey in Barbados approximately 8 years earlier and the use of data determined for a prospective study of the incidence of Epstein-Barr virus infection and infectious mononucleosis in West Point Cadets for psychological factors affecting the development of clinical illness among those infected. Archival materials, such as frozen tissues and paraffin sections, may also now be utilized for identifying genomes of potential oncogenic viruses by the polymerase chain reaction.
...
PMID:The past is prologue: use of serum banks in cancer research. 139 73
This review first considered some general problems in establishing causal links between a virus and a human cancer and offered some guidelines in the pursuit of this objective. Second, it reviewed the current causal associations for several candidate oncogenic viruses in relation to the tumors with which they are associated. These include Epstein-Barr virus in relation to Burkitt's lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, Hodgkin's disease, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; hepatitis B and C viruses in relation to hepatocellular carcinoma; human T-cell
leukemia
/lymphoma virus type 1 and atypical
leukemia
/lymphoma; and human papilloma viruses in relation to cervical carcinoma. For some, the causal relationship is strong: hepatitis B virus with hepatocellular carcinoma, and human T-cell
leukemia
/lymphoma virus with adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma. For one, the causal relationship is moderate: Epstein-Barr virus with
African Burkitt's lymphoma
. For others it is incomplete or inconclusive: Epstein-Barr virus with Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and hepatitis C virus with hepatocellular carcinoma. Current techniques do not permit an answer for some: human papilloma virus with cervical carcinoma.
...
PMID:Viruses and cancer. Causal associations. 166 91
The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been shown to be associated with posttransplant lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, and T-cell lymphoma, in addition to
African Burkitt's lymphoma
. In a retrospective study of 56 consecutive cases of T-cell lymphoma, EBV DNA was found by Southern blot and in situ DNA hybridization in 10 (20%) of 50 peripheral T-cell lymphomas, but in none of six cases of T-lymphoblastic lymphoma. Peripheral T-cell lymphomas containing EBV DNA could be subclassified into three categories according to histology and immunophenotypic studies: (1) T-cell lymphoma of the helper phenotype, five cases. Two cases had histologic features resembling angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy (AILD). (2) T-cell lymphoma of the cytotoxic/suppressor phenotype, four cases. AILD-like features could also be recognized in two cases. Reed-Sternberg-like giant cells were identified in three cases designated Hodgkin-like T-cell lymphoma. (3) Angiocentric T-cell lymphoma or lymphomatoid granulomatosis in one case, initially affecting the skin and nose; no T-cell subset could be defined. Six of the eight EBV DNA-positive patients tested for serum EBV antibodies had elevated titers of IgG antiviral capsid antigen (greater than 640) and/or early antigen (greater than 10). From combined studies of Southern blot hybridization by using EBV termini fragment probe and in situ DNA hybridization, the EBV genomes appeared to be clonotypically proliferated in the neoplastic T cells. The patients in all three groups usually had prolonged fever preceding the diagnosis, hepatosplenomegaly, an aggressive clinical course, and poor response to chemotherapy; nine died with a median survival of only 8 months. We propose that these EBV-associated aggressive T-cell lymphomas, like human T-cell
leukemia
/lymphoma virus-positive T-cell lymphoma, have characteristic clinicopathologic features and should be treated as a separate disease entity.
...
PMID:Aggressive peripheral T-cell lymphomas containing Epstein-Barr viral DNA: a clinicopathologic and molecular analysis. 184 84
Three murine monoclonal antibodies, named 2H9, 1E9 and 1A2, were produced after immunization of BALB/c mice with cells of the SU-DHL-1 cell line from a true histiocytic lymphoma. In frozen sections from various lymphomas, 2H9 and 1A2 selectively stained the cell membranes of neoplastic cells in true histiocytic lymphoma and Hodgkin's disease. Antibody 1E9 stained the nuclear membranes of the tumor cells in true histiocytic lymphoma and malignant histiocytosis. No staining was seen in 56 cases of B and T cell lymphoma. Several tissue culture cell lines, including T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and pre-B cell lines, were not stained. With 2H9, however, a positive reaction was noted for two Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-positive
African Burkitt's lymphoma
cell lines (Daudi and P3HRI), one human T cell lymphoma/
leukemia
-virus-positive cell line (HUT 102), and one EBV-transformed normal B lymphoblastoid cell line (RPMI 8057). In normal lymphoid tissues, 2H9 and 1E9 reacted with the nuclear membranes of histiocytes and interdigitating reticulum cells, whereas 1A2 stained only rare cells of an unknown type. All three antibodies failed to react with B or T cells in frozen tissue sections of normal lymphoid tissues. The use of these three antibodies should facilitate the diagnosis of histiocyte and interdigitating reticulum (IR) cell-related neoplasms, namely, true histiocytic lymphoma, malignant histiocytosis, and Hodgkin's disease. True histiocytic lymphoma and Hodgkin's disease exhibit similar reactivities with these three and with two other monoclonal antibodies (HeFi-1 and Tac), suggesting that these two types of lymphoma are related. In contrast, malignant histiocytosis was negative for 2H9, 1A2, Tac, and HeFi-1. The difference in the phenotypic expression of true histiocytic lymphoma and malignant histiocytosis indicates that they are two different disease entities.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies against SU-DHL-1 cells stain the neoplastic cells in true histiocytic lymphoma, malignant histiocytosis, and Hodgkin's disease. 242 24
The phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) was used to examine the phenotypic changes in three
African Burkitt's lymphoma
cell lines, P3HR1, Daudi, and Raji. Cells were cultured with a nanogram concentration of TPA for up to seven days and then analyzed by flow cytometry and an immunoperoxidase staining method. The cells were stained with a panel of monoclonal antibodies reactive with B lymphocytes or B cell
leukemia
/lymphomas, and an antibody to the enzyme terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (Tdt). All three cell lines were found to express more HLA-linked DC/DS (Leu 10) antigen, while demonstrating a concomitant decrease in the expression of common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA) and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase after TPA induction. The other antigens including Ig, BA1, BA2, Tac, Leu 8, Leu 1, C3bR, Leu 12, and Leu M5 showed no significant changes. The marker expression and differentiation pattern of these
African Burkitt's lymphoma
lines are very similar to those of pre-B cells except for the surface IgM expression observed in Daudi cells. The expression of CALLA and Tdt in
African Burkitt's lymphoma
is probably not the result of an Epstein-Barr virus infection, but may in fact reflect the true nature or origin of tumor cells. We conclude that
African Burkitt's lymphoma
cells are derived from an early stage of B-cell differentiation closely related to, but more mature than pre-B cells.
...
PMID:Induction of differentiation of African Burkitt's lymphoma cells by phorbol ester: possible relation with early B cells. 295 57
The reciprocal chromosome translocation, t(8;14), involving the heavy chain locus on chromosome 14 and the c-myc oncogene on chromosome 8 is a characteristic of the B-cell malignancies Burkitt's lymphoma and acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL). We have cloned and sequenced the t(8; 14) breakpoints of an
African Burkitt's lymphoma
cell line, P3HR-1, and a pre-B cell ALL cell line, 380. In each case the region of chromosome 8 involved has recombined with a JH region on chromosome 14. The two sites of breakage on chromosome 8 lie within 70 base pairs (bp) of one another. At each joining site, sequences homologous to the signal sequences thought to be recognized by the V-D-J recombinase were identified, as were N regions. In B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemias (B-CLL) carrying the t(11; 14) chromosome translocation and in follicular lymphomas carrying the t(14; 18) translocation, the V-D-J recombinase is implicated in the mechanism of chromosomal translocations. We speculate that the same enzymatic mechanism is responsible for the t(8; 14) translocations in
African Burkitt's lymphoma
and pre-B cell ALL.
...
PMID:The t(8; 14) chromosomal translocation occurring in B-cell malignancies results from mistakes in V-D-J joining. 309 50
A survey for HBLV (human B-lymphotropic herpesvirus or human herpesvirus 6) sequences by Southern blot analyses was performed on DNA obtained from a variety of pathologically defined tissues, including a number of lymphomas, leukemias, and tissues from other hematologic disorders. Of the over 50 specimens studied, viral sequences were detected in three lymphomas of B cell derivation: an Epstein-Barr virus-positive
African Burkitt's lymphoma
, a follicular large cell lymphoma (nodular histocytic lymphoma), and two Epstein-Barr virus-negative tumors from a patient with Sjogren's syndrome. These results are the first indication of HBLV sequences associated with B cell tumors in a limited number of cases and raise the possibility that the virus might be involved in the genesis of some B cell tumors.
Leukemia
1988 Mar
PMID:Detection of human B-lymphotropic virus (human herpesvirus 6) sequences in B cell lymphoma tissues of three patients. 325 48
1
2
Next >>