Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To investigate whether expression of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1, CD54) in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) has an impact on the biological behaviour of the disease, we evaluated 751 children of the ALL-BFM 90 trial with B-cell precursor- (n = 677) or T-cell-ALL (n = 74) for CD54 expression within immunological subgroups, its correlation to certain clinical features, and therapy outcome. The highest percentage of patients expressing CD54 was found in common- and pre-B-ALL (76.1% and 61.4%, respectively). There was intermediate expression in pre-pre-B-ALL (47.8%), and the lowest expression was detected in T-ALL (12.2%). A significant positive correlation could be demonstrated between low CD54 expression (< 20% stained blasts) and high peripheral leucocyte counts, central nervous system (CNS) involvement, and splenomegaly at the time of diagnosis (P < 0.01). In addition, CD54 expression was a favourable but not independent prognostic factor. Event-free survival estimate at 4.5 years was 86% for CD54+ patients (n = 463), compared with 78% for CD54- patients (n = 241) (P < 0.01). These findings demonstrate that CD54 expression has an impact on dissemination patterns and outcome of childhood ALL, and emphasizes the potential relevance of adhesion mechanisms in influencing clinical characteristics and prognosis of haematological malignancies.
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PMID:Expression of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia: correlation with clinical features and outcome. 902 17

The expression of a series of adhesion receptors: L-selectins (CD62L): Leu-8, several integrins (LFA-1: CD11a/CD18, VLA-4: CD49d/CD29 and VLA-5: CD49e/CD29), ICAM-1(CD54) and the 'homing receptor' (CD44) were investigated by a dual color flow cytometry in 56 cases of B cell disorders namely, 39 chronic lymphocytic leukemias (CLL), four hairy cell leukemia (HCL), seven splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytes (SLVL) and six other non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). The functional activity of L-selectins was assessed with L-selectin ligand analogs (polyphosphomonester core polysaccharide: PPME and fucoidin). Leukemic B cells were identified with phycoerythrin-conjugated monoclonal antibodies (McAbs) anti-CD19, anti-kappa/lambda investigated simultaneously for the expression of adhesion receptors estimated with fluorescein-isothiocyanate (FITC) conjugated McAbs. The percentage of leukemic cells expressing L-selectins (Leu-8) was high in CLL (52% of positive cases) and integrin expression (LFA-1, VLA-4, 5) was low (19 and 33%, respectively), while a reverse pattern, low Leu-8 (17%), and a high VLA-4 (77%), was observed in non-CLL cases. The expression of LFA-1 alpha-chain was variable in non-CLL cases, and the LFA-1 heterodimer was expressed on most clonal B cell in NHLs (92%). LFA-1 alpha-chain was detected on cells from only one HCL case, while beta2 integrin was regularly expressed on hairy cells. VLA-5 integrin was found on a relatively small number (26%) of mature B cell leukemias. A remarkable finding was the detection of ICAM-1 in all CLL cases albeit the number of positive cells was significantly lower (P < 0.05) compared to non-CLL cases. CD44 was expressed on a high number of neoplastic cells in all the investigated categories. There was no correlation between the expression of the adhesion molecules and clinical and laboratory parameters except for CD18 which was expressed on a significantly (P < 0.05) higher number of leukemic cells in CLL with more advanced stages. This study demonstrates that even closely related B cell leukemia/lymphomas have a certain well defined and strictly variable adhesion profile which is characteristic of the disease entity and therefore, the adhesion profile may offer additional information useful for differential diagnosis and study of disease pathogenesis.
Leukemia 1997 Mar
PMID:Adhesion receptors on peripheral blood leukemic B cells. A comparative study on B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and related lymphoma/leukemias. 906 81

Freshly collected chronic lymphocytic leukemia B cells (B-CLL cells) are known to be inefficient at stimulating allogeneic T cells, and to lack significant expression of B7 (CD80 and CD86) costimulatory molecules. We investigated the potential of CD40 triggering to up-regulate the expression of adhesion and costimulatory molecules on B-CLL cells, and to enhance their immunogenicity towards allogeneic T cells. B-CLL cells cocultured with human CD40 ligand-expressing mouse fibroblasts rapidly up-regulated CD54 and CD58 adhesion molecules and B7-1 (CD80) and B7-2 (CD86) costimulatory molecules, and acquired a strong stimulatory capacity towards CD4+ as well as isolated CD8+ allogeneic T cells. Costimulation by both CD80 and CD86 proved critical for allogeneic T cell proliferation and CD25 and HLA-DR expression, since these were strongly inhibited by anti-CD80 or anti-CD86 monoclonal antibodies, and completely abrogated by CTLA4-Ig fusion protein, which blocks both CD80 and CD86. B7 costimulation also proved critical for restimulation of primed B-CLL-reactive T cells. Most importantly, priming of purified CD8+ T cells with CD40-triggered allogeneic B-CLL cells resulted in cytotoxic activity against the unstimulated B-CLL cells. These findings raise the possibility that CD40 triggering of B-CLL cells might be exploited in immunotherapeutic protocols.
Leukemia 1997 Apr
PMID:CD40 triggering of chronic lymphocytic leukemia B cells results in efficient alloantigen presentation and cytotoxic T lymphocyte induction by up-regulation of CD80 and CD86 costimulatory molecules. 909 98

We studied patients relapsing with myeloid leukemias following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for evidence of immune escape by clonal evolution of the leukemia. Relapsed cells from four out of five patients had a reduced ability to stimulate proliferation of lymphocytes from an HLA-mismatched responder. There was decreased susceptibility to lysis by CTL in three and reduced susceptibility to NK-mediated lysis in one. Relapsed leukemias had marked alterations in expression of critical surface molecules involved in immune responsiveness. Three had decreased expression of MHC class I and II, with no change or increase in CD54 (ICAM-1) or CD80 (B7.1). None of these responded to treatment with donor lymphocytes. Three patients showed no change, or increased expression of MHC with no change or decrease in ICAM-1 or B7.1. Two achieved remission - one in response to donor lymphocytes and one following withdrawal of cyclosporine. In one patient transplanted with myelodysplastic syndrome in transformation, interferon-gamma upregulated expression of MHC molecules in relapsed cells and increased their stimulatory capacity and target susceptibility to unmatched responder lymphocytes. These results suggest that immune escape through clonal evolution of the leukemia is a common occurrence in patients who relapse with myelogenous leukemias after BMT.
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PMID:Immune escape from a graft-versus-leukemia effect may play a role in the relapse of myeloid leukemias following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 916 43

A new cell line (LR10.6) with pre-B cell phenotype has been established from bone marrow cells obtained from a child with B lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia in complete clinical remission. The line expresses nuclear TdT enzyme, cytoplasmic Ig lambda-chain and membrane mu-chain and other B but no T or myeloid markers. The cells also show activation antigens CD69 and CD71, adhesion molecules CD54, CD50 and CD56 and the tyrosine kinase receptor CD117. No expression of multidrug resistance phenotype MDR-1 is observed on these cells which nevertheless express the transcriptional factor p53 protein in a mutant form. Cytogenetic study shows a translocation t(5;12)(q31;p13) involving breakpoints which contain the growth factor interleukin 3 gene (5q31) and the recently identified TEL/ETV6 gene (12p13). Activation of the cells with phorbol-12 myristate 13-acetate (PMA) up-regulates the expression of the CD69 activation antigen and down-regulates the CD117 molecule. In addition, PMA fails to induce the CD20 B cell antigen.
Leukemia 1997 Jul
PMID:A new human cell line with pre-B cell phenotype and t(5;12). 920 88

Two novel cell lines (JURL-MK1 and JURL-MK2) have been established from the peripheral blood of a patient in the blastic phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia. The cells grow in a single cell suspension with doubling times of 48 h (JURL-MK1) and 72 h (JURL-MK2). Cytogenetic analysis has shown that JURL-MK1 is hypodiploid whereas JURL-MK2 is near triploid and that both cell lines retain t(9;22). Moreover, JURL-MK1 and JURL-MK2 have a bcr/abl-fused gene with the same junction found in the patient's fresh cells, and both cell lines express the b3/a2 type of hybrid bcr/abl mRNA. The morphology and immunophenotype of these cell lines are reminiscent of megakaryoblasts. In both lines, a limited but consistent percentage of cells expresses gpIIbIIIa (CD41a), gpIIIa (CD61) and CD36, with no expression of gplb (CD42b), glycophorin A, hemoglobin and CD34. Both cell lines are clearly positive for CD33, CD43, CD45RO and CD63, while CD13, CD44, CD54, CD30 and CD40 are specific features of JURL-MK2. Among cytokine receptors, CD117/SCF-R is strongly displayed by a large fraction of JURL-MK1 cells but is hardly detectable on about 20% JURL-MK2 cells. Both cell lines are clearly positive for CD25/IL2R alpha, while a marked expression of CD116/GM-CSF-R and CDw123/IL3R alpha is restricted to JURL-MK2. Induction of cell differentiation in vitro has demonstrated that TPA is able to modulate the JURL-MK1 phenotype, causing an increased expression of platelet-associated antigens. The JURL-MK2 phenotype is easily modulated by both TPA and DMSO, which cause an increased expression of CD41a and CD117 accompanied by a decreased expression of CD30. Proliferation studies demonstrated that JURL-MK1 cell growth is enhanced by stem cell factor, while JURL-MK2 proliferation is unaffected by this cytokine. JURL-MK1 and JURL-MK2 are two novel cell lines with divergent biological features, representing a 'two-sided' model for investigating new aspects of megakaryocytopoiesis.
Leukemia 1997 Sep
PMID:JURL-MK1 (c-kit(high)/CD30-/CD40-) and JURL-MK2 (c-kit(low)/CD30+/CD40+) cell lines: 'two-sided' model for investigating leukemic megakaryocytopoiesis. 930 12

Although retinoic acid (RA) has been known for many years to be a modulating agent that plays a role in generating both granulocytes and monocytes, the molecular mechanism underlying this role has not been defined in the monoblast lineage. In particular, the part played by the retinoid X receptors (RXRs), which are members of the steroid/thyroid hormone nuclear receptor family, has not been explored. In this study, therefore, the human monoblastic leukemia cell line U937 has been used as a model system to investigate the role of one of the RXRs, RXR-alpha, in monoblast differentiation. RXR-alpha mRNA was present in untreated U937 cells, and levels increased after induction of differentiation with phorbol ester. The same was found for RXR-beta mRNA. Using plasmids containing sense or antisense RXR-alpha sequences under the control of an inducible promoter, we generated stably transfected cell lines which expressed either increased or decreased levels of RXR-alpha, respectively. The sense cell lines (U alpha S and its clonal derivative alpha G2S) showed increased sensitivity to RA, while the antisense cell lines (U alpha A and its clonal derivative alpha B5A) showed decreased sensitivity to RA, as demonstrated by growth inhibition and by regulation of an RA-responsive reporter gene. Both U alpha A and alpha B5A also failed to respond to another modulating agent, 1 alpha,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (DHCC), but only U alpha S and not alpha G2S showed an enhanced response to DHCC. The combination of RA and DHCC together inhibited growth of both sense and antisense cell lines. In addition, alpha G2S exhibited increased expression of CD11b and CD54, while alpha B5A cells showed increased expression of CD102, suggesting that RXR-alpha has a role in regulating expression of cell adhesion molecules in U937 cells. These results demonstrate that RXR-alpha has a role in mediating growth inhibition and cell adhesion during myelomonocytic differentiation, and suggest that different species of heterodimers involving RXR-alpha may control the acquisition of different features of mature monocyte/macrophage function.
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PMID:Stable transfection of U937 cells with sense or antisense RXR-alpha cDNA suggests a role for RXR-alpha in the control of monoblastic differentiation induced by retinoic acid and vitamin D. 934 89

Leukemic growth is determined by the balance of cell proliferation, differentiation and cell death. In vitro, the blasts of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) proliferate under the influence of certain positive and negative regulators (cytokines). We conducted this study to determine whether cytokines could induce markers of cell death (FAS/Apo-1/CD95), of cell activation (HLA-DR) and cell adhesion (ICAM-1, CD54) in AML cell lines and primary AML samples. As inducers, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and interferon (IFN)-gamma were chosen. At baseline, CD95 and CD54 were weakly and HLA-DR was strongly expressed. CD95 was induced by TNF in 6/12 myeloid leukemia cell lines, and by IFN in 9/12 cell lines. Taken together, CD95 was upregulated by at least one cytokine in 11/12 cell lines. HLA-DR was inducible in 10/12 cell lines, with IFN being more potent than TNF. CD54 showed the strongest induction: TNF resulted in a more than 20-fold induction in positive cell lines, and IFN resulted in a more than 20-fold induction. In primary AML samples, CD95 was induced in 14/14 samples examined, with TNF being more potent than IFN. HLA-DR expression was increased by IFN in 12/15 samples and by TNF in 11/13 samples. The inducibility of HLA-DR by IFN was inversely correlated with baseline expression. As in the cell lines, CD54 was induced in most cases of AML. In addition to the induction of surface markers by cytokines, the culture of leukemia cells with fetal calf serum increased the expression of these markers, especially CD95 and CD54. Our results demonstrate that CD95 is not downregulated when TNF binds to its receptors, but is induced in cell lines and patient samples. Despite the induction of expression of CD95 (all cases of AML and most cell lines), 7/8 myelogenous leukemia lines and 6/7 patient samples remained resistant to CD95 triggering by antibody or by CD95 ligand, which suggests a lesion in normal cell signaling. As a positive control, a T-cell line (Jurkat) with 60% to > 90% apoptotic cells after a 22 h incubation was used. The number of CD95-binding sites was not correlated with the induction of apoptosis. The resistance of most cases of AML to CD95 triggering despite inducible expression may also be related to leukemia-specific antagonists of CD95 signal transduction, and requires further investigation. Altogether, our results indicate that surface markers related to apoptosis, activation and adhesion can be induced on AML blasts, and could be relevant to treatment strategies that exploit ligand binding to these surface epitopes.
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PMID:Induction of death (CD95/FAS), activation and adhesion (CD54) molecules on blast cells of acute myelogenous leukemias by TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma. 938 99

Clinical data and animal models afford evidence for anti-leukemia immunity in humans, but the interactions critical for blast cell recognition are unresolved. Expression of B7 molecules by antigen-presenting cells (APC) provides co-stimulatory signals to T lymphocytes via CD28 and CTLA-4 which prevent the induction of alloantigen-specific tolerance. Conversely, expression of CD40 ligand by stimulated T cells activates APC via CD40. In human hematological B cell malignancies (follicular lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia), the defect in alloantigen presentation of tumoral cells can be repaired by up-regulation of B7 and other co-stimulatory molecules via CD40. We studied the role of B7 molecules in alloimmune recognition and the various ways to improve the antitumoral response on peripheral blood leukemic cells from 20 patients with a diagnosis of primary acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We focused on myelo/monocytic M4/M5 French-American-British classification subtypes which are considered as the neoplastic counterpart of normal monocytes, a prototypic APC. In one-way mixed lymphocyte reaction of CD4+ T cells against leukemic cells, differences in B7-1, B7-2 or CD40 expression by AML cells did not induce specific cytokine secretion; interleukin (IL)-2 and interferon (IFN)-gamma were detected but not IL-4, corresponding to a Th1 pattern. Blockade experiments showed that proliferation and IFN-gamma secretion only partially depended on B7 molecules, which in contrast had a pivotal role in IL-2 synthesis. In contrast with murine models which suggest a pivotal role for CD80/B7-1 in the immune response against AML, our data support a greater role for CD86/B7-2, in line with the baseline expression of CD86/B7-2 and lack of CD80/B7-1 on most M4/M5 AML cells. AML cell stimulation via CD40: (1) significantly improved IL-2 secretion but not proliferation of responding T lymphocytes, (2) increased CD54/ICAM-1 expression in three quarters of cases, (3) failed in most cases to induce CD40-specific CD80/B7-1 up-regulation, and (4) had a weak effect on CD86/B7-2 expression. These data contrast with the very efficient up-regulation of both B7 co-stimulatory molecule expression and tumoral cell alloimmune recognition following CD40 stimulation in B cell malignancy models. The role of the defective B7 molecule up-regulation by the CD40 pathway in inefficient tumor immunogenicity of primary AML cells has to be further investigated, in particular using transfection experiments of CD80/B7-1-deficient AML cell lines. From our in vitro data we conclude that B7 molecules play an important role in the alloimmune surveillance of AML as suggested by the high B7 molecule dependency of IL-2 secretion. Nonetheless, the contribution of B7 molecules to alloimmune T cell proliferation against primary AML cells in human and the way to improve it--regulation via CD40 in particular--differ from B cell malignancies and murine models, suggesting the requirement for specific strategies in the development of antitumor immunity.
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PMID:Regulation of CD80/B7-1 and CD86/B7-2 molecule expression in human primary acute myeloid leukemia and their role in allogenic immune recognition. 948 89

Bacterial superantigens (SAgs) bound to MHC class II molecules on target cells are efficient activators of cytotoxic T cells expressing certain T cell receptor (TCR) Vbeta regions We described earlier that the specificity of the SAg Staphylococcus enterotoxin A (SEA) can be changed by introducing a D227A point mutation in the major MHC class II binding site and by genetically fusing the SEA mutant (SEAm) to protein A (PA). This SEAm-PA fusion protein can then be used to direct cytotoxic T cells to tumour cells coated with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). In this communication, we tested the PA-SEAm fusion protein together with mAbs against the myeloid cell surface antigens CD13, CD15 and CD33. A SEA-reactive T cell line was used as effector cells against 10 different myeloid leukaemic cell lines. Optimal lysis of antigen positive leukaemic cells was obtained at a PA-SEAm concentration of 1 ng/ml and effector : target cell ratios of 15 : 1. No correlation between target cell sensitivity and the level of surface antigen expression could be seen. The 6 acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cell lines tested appeared to be more sensitive than the 4 chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) cell lines. The sensitivity of the AML cell line HL-60 could be improved further by stimulation with TNFalpha. This was accompanied by increased surface ICAM-1 expression whereas specific target molecule expression (CD13, CD33) was unchanged. This suggests that sensitivity to lysis is related to the leukaemic subtype and ICAM-1 expression but not to the tumour antigen density. Our results show that it is possible to direct cytotoxic T cells to myeloid leukaemia cells by using SAgs linked to mAbs, and encourage the construction and testing of a recombinant direct SAg-mAb fusion protein as a candidate drug for therapy of myeloid leukaemias.
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PMID:Antibody-directed superantigen-mediated T-cell killing of myeloid leukaemic cell line cells. 957 76


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