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)

Many viruses have developed mechanisms to escape the cellular immune response by inhibiting antigen presentation from major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. Most of these immune escape mechanisms are highly host adapted and specific to a given virus species or family. Recent observations however, suggest that a conserved family of viral proteins is used by both gamma-2 herpesviruses and by poxviruses to downregulate MHC class I. In addition, other cell surface molecules involved in immune recognition by T cells and NK cells are also downregulated. Two open reading frames (ORFs), K3 and K5, of Kaposi's sarcoma associated virus (KSHV) and one ORFs, K3, of murine gamma herpesvirus 68 (MHV 68) inhibit surface expression of MHC I molecules. In cells transfected with KSHV-K3 and KSHV-K5, MHC I is rapidly endocytosed and degraded in lysosomes whereas in MHV 68-K3 transfected cells, MHC I is targeted for proteasomal degradation. The K3 and K5 genes display a characteristic conserved domain structure of an amino-terminal plant homeo domain/leukemia associated protein-zinc finger domain followed by two carboxyterminal transmembrane domains. Related proteins are not only found in other gamma-2 herpesviruses, but also in several poxviruses. Moreover, recent data suggest that the K3-related protein of myxoma virus also downregulates MHC I. The presence of similar genes in eukaryotic genomes further indicates that the viral ORFs were originally derived from host genes of as yet unknown function. The molecular mechanism of MHC I downregulation by this novel gene family is only poorly understood at present. However, several lines of evidence suggest that they might function as ubiquitin ligases that regulate the intracellular transport of transmembrane proteins through ubiquitination.
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PMID:Immune evasion by a novel family of viral PHD/LAP-finger proteins of gamma-2 herpesviruses and poxviruses. 1229 27

We retrospectively analyzed the percentages and absolute numbers of T cells, natural killer (NK) cells and NK cell subsets in cryopreserved samples of either bone marrow or blood non-T cell-depleted allogeneic MHC-matched hematopoietic grafts. Using flow cytometry, we found higher numbers of NK cells in aphereses than in bone marrow collections. We further investigated the distribution of NK cell subsets, defined by the cell surface expression of MHC class I-specific receptors, in these allogeneic grafts. The distribution of NK cell subsets from the two different origins were similar, with the exception of the CD158a/h(+) NK cell subset, whose size appeared to be smaller in bone marrow. The search for relations between the numbers of infused cells and post-transplantation events demonstrated that increasing numbers of infused T cells but not NK cells are related with decreased overall survival. Our study highlights the toxicity of infused T cells but not NK cells in allogeneic MHC-matched hematopoietic grafts. These data pave the way for further trials to investigate the effect of NK cell infusion in MHC-matched allogeneic transplantation, and in particular whether ex vivo NK cell expansion and activation may enhance the anti-tumoral effect of the procedure and decrease its morbidity.
Leukemia 2002 Nov
PMID:Analysis of donor NK and T cells infused in patients undergoing MHC-matched allogeneic hematopoietic transplantation. 1239 71

LP-BM5 murine leukemia virus (MuLV) infection causes murine acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (MAIDS), a disease characterized by varied functional abnormalities of immunocompetent cells. We found that MAIDS progression was severely retarded in IL-15 transgenic (Tg) mice constructed with cDNA encoding secretable IL-15 under the control of an MHC class I promoter. Several immune defects, including impaired natural killer activity, depressed IFN-gamma production by T cells stimulated with anti-T cell receptor cross-linking, and increased susceptibility to Mycobacterium bovis infection, were prevented in IL-15 Tg mice inoculated with LP-BM5 MuLV. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte response to a highly antigenic 10-mer peptide encoded by LP-BM5-defective virus gag p12 gene was detected in the spleen and peritoneal exudate cells from IL-15 Tg mice infected with LP-BM5 MuLV. Intramuscular injection of cDNA encoding secretable IL-15 also prevented the development of MAIDS. These results indicate that IL-15 prevents the progression of MAIDS and may provide insight into an immunotherapeutic approach using the IL-15 gene for controlling retrovirus-induced immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Overexpression of interleukin-15 prevents the development of murine retrovirus-induced acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 1240 18

NKG2D, together with NKp46 and NKp30, represents a major triggering receptor involved in the induction of cytotoxicity by both resting and activated human natural killer cells. In this study, we analyzed the expression and the functional relevance of MHC class I-related chain A (MICA) and UL16 binding protein (ULBP), the major cellular ligands for human NKG2D, in human tumor cell lines of different histological origin. We show that MICA and ULBP are frequently coexpressed by carcinoma cell lines, whereas MICA is expressed more frequently than ULBP by melanoma cell lines. Interestingly, the MICA(-) ULBP(+) phenotype was detected in most T cell leukemia cell lines, whereas the MICA(-) ULBP(-) phenotype characterized all acute myeloid leukemia and most B-cell lymphoma cell lines analyzed. These results, together with functional experiments, based on monoclonal antibody-mediated blocking of either NKG2D or its ligands, showed that killing of certain MICA(-) cell tumors is at least in part NKG2D dependent. Indeed, leukemic T cells as well as certain B-cell lymphomas were killed in a NKG2D-dependent fashion upon recognition of ULBP molecules. Moreover, ULBP could induce NKG2D-mediated NK cell triggering also in tumors coexpressing MICA. Our data suggest that the involvement of NKG2D in natural killer cell-mediated cytotoxicity strictly correlates with the expression and the surface density of MICA and ULBP on target cell tumors of different histotypes.
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PMID:Major histocompatibility complex class I-related chain A and UL16-binding protein expression on tumor cell lines of different histotypes: analysis of tumor susceptibility to NKG2D-dependent natural killer cell cytotoxicity. 1241 45

"Classical" MHC class I (I-a) genes are extraordinarily polymorphic, but "nonclassical" MHC class I (I-b) genes are monomorphic or oligomorphic. Although diversifying (positive) Darwinian selection is thought to explain the origin and maintenance of MHC class I-a polymorphisms, genetic mechanisms underlying MHC class I-b evolution are uncertain. In one extreme model, MHC class I-b loci are derived by gene duplication from MHC class I-a alleles but rapidly drift into functional obsolescence and are eventually deleted. In this model, extant MHC class I-b genes are relatively young, tend to be dysfunctional or pseudogenic, and orthologies are restricted to close taxa. An alternative model proposed that the mouse MHC class I-b gene thymus leukemia Ag (TL) arose approximately 100 million years ago, near the time of the mammalian radiation. To determine the mode of evolution of TL, we cloned TL from genomic DNA of 11 species of subfamily Murinae: Every sample we tested contained TL, suggesting this molecule has been maintained throughout murine evolution. The sequence similarity of TL orthologs ranged from 85-99% and was inversely proportional to taxonomic distance. The sequences showed high conservation throughout the entire extracellular domains with exceptional conservation in the putative Ag recognition site. Our results strengthen the hypotheses that TL has evolved a specialized function and represents an ancient MHC class I-b gene.
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PMID:Hyperconservation of the putative antigen recognition site of the MHC class I-b molecule TL in the subfamily Murinae: evidence that thymus leukemia antigen is an ancient mammalian gene. 1247 Nov 22

The identification of NK cell receptors specific for MHC class I molecules has greatly improved our knowledge of NK cell reactivity and specificity. Inhibitory receptors prevent NK cell activation directed against cells expressing self-MHC class I molecules. Consequently, diseased cells that do not express self-MHC class I molecules become susceptible to NK cell-mediated attack. Because of the specificity and distribution of inhibitory NK cell receptors, cells that express non-self (allogeneic) MHC class I molecules are also susceptible to NK cell reactions. This feature has been exploited in a clinical setting to treat leukemia patients.
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PMID:The NK cell receptor repertoire: formation, adaptation and exploitation. 1263 75

Dendritic cells (DC) are professional (specialised) antigen-presenting cells that can capture antigen from apoptotic tumour cells and induce MHC class I- and II-restricted responses. Also, DC fused with tumour cells may be effective for immune response induction. Both cell preparations may be considered as vaccine candidates in a therapeutic approach. We examined autologous T-cell activation by DC that had endocytosed leukaemic B-cell apoptotic bodies (Apo-DC) and compared it to the T-cell stimulatory capacity of DC that were fused with tumour cells. Following incubation, 22.6+/-6.2 (mean+/-s.e.m.) of DC had endocytosed leukaemic cells, while the frequency of DC-leukaemic cell hybrids was 10.5+/-2.6%. Apo-DC and hybrid cells both demonstrated the ability to stimulate a tumour-specific T-cell immune response in vitro. A T-cell proliferation response was also observed in four out of five CLL patients when using Apo-DC. However, fusion hybrids lacked the ability to elicit a proliferative response. Apo-DC also induced an IFN-gamma response, as did hybrid cells. The cytokine response induced by Apo-DC was significantly higher than that induced by fusion (P<0.05). This study shows that endocytosed apoptotic tumour cells induced a significantly stronger T-cell response than DC hybrids; and as such should be a better candidate for vaccine production.
Leukemia 2003 May
PMID:Dendritic cells loaded with apoptotic tumour cells induce a stronger T-cell response than dendritic cell-tumour hybrids in B-CLL. 1275 Jul 3

The U3 region of the LTR of oncogenic Moloney murine leukemia virus (Mo-MuLV) and feline leukemia viruses (FeLV) have been previously reported to activate expression of specific cellular genes in trans, such as MHC class I, collagenase IV, and MCP-1, in an integration-independent manner. It has been suggested that transactivation of these specific cellular genes by leukemia virus U3-LTR may contribute to the multistage process of leukemogenesis. The U3-LTR region, necessary for gene transactivational activity, also contains multiple transcription factor-binding sites that are essential for normal virus replication. To dissect the promoter activity and the gene transactivational activity of the U3-LTR, we conducted mutational analysis of the U3-LTR region of FeLV-A molecular clone 61E. We identified minimal nucleotide substitution mutants on the U3 LTR that did not disturb transcription factor-binding sites but abrogated its ability to transactivate the collagenase gene promoter. To determine if these mutations actually have altered any uncharacterized important transcription factor-binding site, we introduced these U3-LTR mutations into the full-length infectious molecular clone 61E. We demonstrate that the mutant virus was replication competent but could not transactivate cellular gene expression. These results thus suggest that the gene transactivational activity is a distinct property of the LTR and possibly not related to its promoter activity. The cellular gene transactivational activity-deficient mutant FeLV generated in this study may also serve as a valuable reagent for testing the biological significance of LTR-mediated cellular gene activation in the tumorigenesis caused by leukemia viruses.
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PMID:Mutations that abrogate transactivational activity of the feline leukemia virus long terminal repeat do not affect virus replication. 1275 76

Although differentiation of leukemic blasts to dendritic cells (DC) has promise in vaccine strategies, the mechanisms underlying this differentiation and the differences between leukemia and normal progenitor-derived DC are largely undescribed. In the case of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), understanding the relationship between the induction of DC differentiation and the expression of the BCR-ABL oncogene has direct relevance to CML biology as well as the development of new therapeutic approaches. We now report that direct activation of protein kinase C (PKC) by the phorbol ester PMA in the BCR-ABL(+) CML cell line K562 and primary CML blasts induced nonterminal differentiation into cells with typical DC morphology (cytoplasmic dendrites), characteristic surface markers (MHC class I, MHC class II, CD86, CD40), chemokine and transcription factor expression, and ability to stimulate T cell proliferation (equivalent to normal monocyte-derived DC). PKC-induced differentiation was associated with down-regulation of BCR-ABL mRNA expression, protein levels, and kinase activity. This down-regulation appeared to be signaled through the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. Therefore, PKC-driven differentiation of CML blasts into DC-like cells suggests a potentially novel strategy to down-regulate BCR-ABL activity, yet raises the possibility that CML-derived DC vaccines will be less effective in presenting leukemia-specific Ags.
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PMID:Induced dendritic cell differentiation of chronic myeloid leukemia blasts is associated with down-regulation of BCR-ABL. 1290 78

The thymus leukemia antigens (TL) belong to the MHC class Ib family and can be recognized by CD8-dependent or -independent cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) showing TL, but not H-2, restriction. We previously reported that the CTL epitope is TAP independent and in the present study we further characterize the recognition mechanism of CD8-dependent TL-specific TCRalphabeta CTL. We first prepared empty TL tetramers by way of peptide-independent folding with recombinant proteins produced in an Escherichia coli expression system, and showed that TL-specific CTL recognized TL without putative TL-associated peptide and/or post-translational modifications of TL by mammalian and insect cells. We next prepared transfectants expressing various chimeric TL molecules with mouse or human MHC class I as well as chimeric TL tetramers with recombinant proteins produced by insect cells, and demonstrated that chimeric TL whose alpha3 domain was replaced by that of H-2K(b), but not of HLA-A2, was sufficient for binding and activation of TL-specific CTL. These results indicate that TL-specific CTL recognize predominantly their alpha1/alpha2 domain as an epitope(s) and that the binding activity to the murine CD8 of the alpha3 domain of H-2K(b) is sufficient to induce their CTL activity, although it is known to be weaker than that of TL, but stronger than that of HLA. The results taken together indicate that CD8-dependent TL-specific TCRalphabeta CTL recognize an epitope(s) of the alpha1/alpha2 domain of TL free from antigenic molecules, and that CD8 plays an important role in stable interactions between TL and their corresponding TCR.
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PMID:Thymus leukemia antigen (TL)-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes recognize the alpha1/alpha2 domain of TL free from antigenic peptides. 1456 30


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