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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To see whether urine enzyme activities could be used as an index in evaluating the disease status of
leukemia
patients, we examined the activities of four enzymes: arylsulfatases A(AS-A) and B(AS-B), alkaline phosphatase (AP), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). AP and LDH showed no consistent patterns. The activities of AS-A and AS-B correlated well with the patient's clinical status, increasing during progression of disease and decreasing toward normal activities during responses to therapy, as judged from bone marrow cellularity and differential. Among 23 untreated patients with a histologic diagnosis of acute leukemia we found increased activities of the urine enzymes in these proportions: AS-A in 23 patients (100%), AS-B in 22 (95.7%), AP in 7 (30.4%), and LDH in 10 (43.5%). Five patients in remission from acute leukemia had normal activities for all four enzymes. In one patient in remission for more than one year, a rise in urinary
arylsulfatase
activity preceded observable bone marrow relapse by 4 months. Unlike that of serum of urine lysozyme and serum copper, the determination of urine
arylsulfatase
activities appears to be a consistent, useful indicator of response to antileukemic therapy. In contrast to the determination of polyamines, the quantitation of
arylsulfatase
activity is achieved with greater ease and with instrumentation available in most clinical laboratories.
...
PMID:A noninvasive technique for monitoring response to chemotherapy in human acute leukemia. 3
The availability of a patient with basophilic
leukemia
manifesting 75 to 90% mature basophils permitted the use of a cell concentration sufficient to generate and release mediators upon interaction with a calcium ionophore in quantities adequate for their physiocochemical characterization. The mediators were defined in terms of their physicochemical characteristics: slow reacting substance of anaphylaxis (SRS-A) by purification through silicic acid chromatography and inactivation by
arylsulfatase
; eosinophil chemotactic factor of anaphylaxis (ECF-A) by its gel filtration through Sephadex G-25 and inactivation by subtilisin and not trypsin; and platelet-activating factor (PAF) by its inherent binding to albumin. Both ECF-A and histamine were present in their preformed state, and for histamine it was possible to establish that the concentration per cell was comparable to that of normal human basophils. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP suppressed release of histamine and SRS-A, indicating that their availability was under a control similar to that observed with normal cells subjected to immunologic activation. The demonstration that a suspension of leukemic human basophils contained the preformed mediators, histamine and ECF-A, and generated SRS-A and PAF for release along with histamine and ECF-A, after activation with a calcium ionophore, establishes that a single cell type can serve as a source of the four recognized mediators of immediate-type hypersensitivity.
...
PMID:The release of four mediators of immediate hypersensitivity from human leukemic basophils. 4 47
When rat basophilic
leukemia
(RBL-1) cells were exposed to the ionophore A23187, a substance was released that produced a prolonged contraction of guinea pig ileum resembling that seen with slow reacting substances (SRSs) from various sources. The response was temperature, dose, and the time dependent with no activity being demonstrated in unstimulated cells. Several lines of evidence indicated that the RBL-1 product was markedly similar or identical to SRSs obtained from non-neoplastic tissues: 1) appropriate behavior in seven different chromatographic systems, 2) an appropriate profile of activity on various smooth muscle preparations, 3) an ability of low concentrations of the selective SRS inhibitor FPL 55712 to block the guinea pig ileal response, 4) failure of chymotrypsin to destroy activity, 5) loss of the activity after incubation with
arylsulfatase
, and 6) an ability to release activity from cells preincubated with indomethacin. Since RBL-1 cells can be grown in considerable guantity and under optimal conditions an average of 1500 SRS units/10(7) cells can be obtained, these cells should be useful as a biosynthetic source in further attempts to purify and characterize the SRS molecule.
...
PMID:Release of slow reacting substance (SRS) from rat basophilic leukemia (RBL-1) cells. 32 79
The lysosomal removal of the sulfate moiety from sulfatide requires the action of two proteins,
arylsulfatase A
and sphingolipid activator protein-1 (SAP-1). Recently, patients have been identified who have a variant form of metachromatic leukodystrophy which is characterized by mutations in the gene coding for SAP-1, which is also called "prosaposin." All of the mutations characterized in these patients result in (a) deficient mature SAP-1, as determined by immunoblotting after SDS-PAGE of tissue and cell extracts, and (b) decreased ability of cultured skin fibroblasts to metabolize endocytosed [14C]-sulfatide. We now report the insertion of the full-length prosaposin cDNA into the Moloney murine
leukemia
virus-derived retroviral vector, pLJ, and the infection of cultured skin fibroblasts from a newly diagnosed and molecularly characterized patient with SAP-1 deficiency. The cultured cells infected with the prosaposin cDNA construct now show both production of normal levels of mature SAP-1 and completely normal metabolism of endocytosed [14C]-sulfatide. These studies demonstrate that the virally transferred prosaposin cDNA is processed normally and is localized within lysosomes, where it is needed for interaction between sulfatide and
arylsulfatase A
. In addition, normal as well as mutant sequences can now be found by allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization of PCR-amplified genomic DNA by using exonic sequences as primers.
...
PMID:Correction of sulfatide metabolism after transfer of prosaposin cDNA to cultured cells from a patient with SAP-1 deficiency. 135 Aug 85
An enzyme with
sulfatase
activity has been isolated from the granules of a rat NK
leukemia
cell line, CRNK-16. The enzyme has been purified from crude preparation, with a specific activity of 52 nmol/min/mg of protein, by DEAE ion exchange and Con A-Sepharose affinity chromatography, resulting in a specific activity of 230 nmol/min/mg of protein. The molecular mass of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 40 kDa by gel filtration chromatography at pH 7.4, but the enzyme had the ability to complex to molecular masses of greater than 300 kDa at low pH when crude granule extract was used as the starting sample, suggesting that it associates with other granule components. The enzyme was determined to be an
arylsulfatase
by its ability to (a) hydrolyze p-nitrophenyl sulfate (Km = 26.0 mM) and p-nitrocatechol sulfate (pNC sulfate) (Km = 1.1 mM) and (b) be inhibited by sulfite (Ki = 6.0 x 10(-7) M), sulfate (Ki = 1 x 10(-3) M), and phosphate (Ki = 4 x 10(-5) M) in a competitive manner. The pH optimum for enzymatic activity was determined to be 5.6. The role of this enzyme in cytolytic function was investigated by examining the effect of its substrates and inhibitors on granule- and cell-mediated lysis. pNC sulfate was shown to cause a dose-dependent inhibition of target cell lysis by isolated cytolytic granules (complete inhibition at 12.5 mM). Sulfite induced an incomplete inhibition (50% at 1 mM), whereas phosphate was essentially without inhibitory effect. Sulfate, on the other hand, altered lytic activity in a biphasic manner, inasmuch as it induced an inhibition of lysis at high concentrations and an increase of lysis at low concentrations. Cell-mediated lysis was inhibited by pNC sulfate in a dose-dependent fashion at concentrations greater than 2.5 mM, with nearly complete inhibition at 50 mM. Sulfate also altered the lytic activity by intact cells in a biphasic manner, although the effect was much less pronounced. Sulfite and phosphate caused only a 30% inhibition of lytic activity. These results suggest that the
sulfatase
enzyme is involved in NK cytolytic function, presumably at the lethal hit stage.
...
PMID:Natural killer cell cytolytic granule-associated enzymes. I. Purification, characterization, and analysis of function of an enzyme with sulfatase activity. 186 Oct 83
We previously demonstrated that an acidic variant form of lysosomal
arylsulfatase B
accumulated in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) cells was highly phosphorylated at its carbohydrate moiety (Uehara Y, et al, Cancer Res 43:5618, 1983). Since lysosomal hydrolases including the
sulfatase
underwent the posttranslational phosphorylation processing at the carbohydrate moiety, we investigated two enzymes acting on the processing in peripheral leukocytes from
leukemia
patients. The activity level of the first enzyme in the processing, an N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase to form phosphodiester at the carbohydrates, was significantly higher in CML cells than in normal control. The transferase level in CML cells was also higher compared with that in normal bone marrow cells, which include myeloid progenitor cells. However, the activity of the second processing enzyme, a phosphodiester glycosidase that converts a phosphodiester to a phosphomonoester, showed no consistent change in CML cells. Thus, increment of the
sulfatase
variant containing phosphomonoesters and diesters in CML cells is most probably associated with elevated activities of the phosphotransferase. In two cases of CML in blastic crisis and a case of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), activity of the processing enzyme was considerably decreased concomitant with reduction of peripheral blastic cells by chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Processing enzymes acting on carbohydrate moiety of lysosomal hydrolases in leukemic cells: elevated activity of N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase. 254 Aug 59
Bone marrow-derived leukocytes of murine epidermis can express two phenotypes: typical Langerhans cells, which are Ia+ and Thy-1-, and a recently discovered second population that is Thy-1+ and Ia-. To verify that these phenotypes are expressed by two different cell types, and to help understand their lineage and function, we have studied morphology and reactivity with a large panel of antibodies. Dual antibody immunofluorescence combined with electron microscopy showed that Thy-1+ and Ia+ cells were each distributed in a regular fashion and formed adjacent dendritic systems in or close to the basal layer. Double-labeling studies with anti-Ia and a second monoclonal antibody revealed that all Langerhans cells expressed F4/80 (macrophage), Mac-1 (C3bi receptor), and 2.4G2 (Fc receptor), as well as the thymus
leukemia
(TL) and heat-stable (M1.69/16) antigens. A large fraction expressed S100 and all exhibited membrane ATPase and nonspecific esterase. In contrast, Thy-1+ cells lacked all these features of Langerhans cells, except that a minority were strongly reactive with 2.4G2. Thy-1+ cells also lacked differentiation antigens of most other types of leukocytes, except they were rich in asialo GM1. By electron microscopy, Thy-1+ cells had cytoplasmic granules that were similar in structure and in their aryl
sulfatase
content to those previously described in natural killer cells. The granules were enlarged in beige mice, suggesting a lysosomal origin, and were present in mast cell-deficient W/Wv mice, indicating no relation to mast cells. We conclude that Thy-1+ epidermal cells are thoroughly distinct from Langerhans cells. On the basis of morphology and phenotype, they may represent a type of tissue natural killer cell. Thy-1+ natural killer cells are now being identified in several nonlymphoid sites, such as gut epithelium and the livers of mice given adjuvants. If Thy-1+ epidermal cells prove to be natural killer cells, it is noteworthy that they represent a resident population regularly distributed in the basal layer of all mouse strains. The notion that Thy-1+ epidermal cells are immature natural killer cells is intriguing in light of recent evidence that Ia+ Langerhans cells are also immature with respect to accessory cell function. The epidermis may not have the functional capacities of a lymphoid organ, but it could contribute immature cells important for both natural and acquired resistance.
...
PMID:The Thy-1-bearing cell of murine epidermis. A distinctive leukocyte perhaps related to natural killer cells. 286 Dec 45
Eosinophils derived from HL-60 cells share many of the abnormalities of granule histochemistry and morphology frequently seen in eosinophils of patients with certain malignancies, especially those seen in acute myelomonocytic
leukemia
with abnormal eosinophils (FAB class M4eo). In order to understand the pathogenesis of these abnormalities, four enzymes, characteristic of the eosinophil, were studied in HL-60 promyelocytic leukemia cells at various stages of eosinophilic differentiation. Using biochemical and ultrahistochemical techniques, the following differences from normal eosinophil development were demonstrated. First, both myeloperoxidase and eosinophil peroxidase coexisted in the population of maturing HL-60 eosinophils. Second, the granules formed from the condensation of material in vacuoles which were derived from dilated segments of the endoplasmic reticulum; the role of the Golgi apparatus in processing of peroxidase appeared minimal. Third, low levels of lysophospholipase and
arylsulfatase
were present in the cells compared to normal eosinophils. Finally, crystallizations resembling precursor structures of Auer rods appeared in the granules of about 5% of the cells. These findings suggest that several disorders of the control of protein synthesis and processing exist in HL-60 eosinophils which may be responsible for the abnormal granule morphology and histochemistry.
...
PMID:Synthesis of eosinophil-associated enzymes in HL-60 promyelocytic leukemia cells. 301 41
Urinary
arylsulfatase
(AS) activities were measured in 20 normal children and 10 patients with malignant disease, consisting of
leukemia
(6), Hodgkin's disease (1), neuroblastoma (2), and malignant teratoma (1), Seven of the patients showed a significantly high activity, and a serial measurement carried out in 4 patients showed a well correlated relationship between AS activity and the activity of disease. Thus the measurement of urinary AS activity could be a laboratory test for monitoring the activity of malignant diseases because of its simple and rapid procedure.
...
PMID:Urinary arylsulfatase in normal children and in patients with pediatric malignant disease. 613 69
Lysosomal arylsulfatases A and B of peripheral leukocytes from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia and from healthy subjects were studied. Two enzyme activities of
leukemia
cells were significantly higher than those of cells from healthy subjects, irrespective of total and differential counts of leukemic cells. Upon anion-exchange chromatography, the arylsulfatases of chronic myelogenous leukemia cells and normal leukocytes were separated into the basic B enzyme and its anionic variant (B1) and A enzyme. However, the amount of B1 enzyme relative to B enzyme or the activity ratio of B1 enzyme to total
arylsulfatase B
(B + B1) was higher in chronic myelogenous leukemia cells than in normal cells. The anionic property of the enzyme was found to be due to phosphate groups bound to the carbohydrate moiety of the
arylsulfatase
, based on the following results. When B1 enzyme was treated with alkaline phosphatase followed by isoelectric focusing, it was changed to a less anionic enzyme with heterogeneous components which are ascribed to phosphodiester groups linked to the heterogeneous carbohydrate moiety of the enzyme; no effect was observed by sialidase treatment. Upon treatment of B1 enzyme with endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H, which cleaves sugar chains of a high mannose type in glycoproteins, the anionic heterogeneous components were converted to the basic component similar to B enzyme. From our present and previous observations, it can be concluded that the increase of phosphorylated forms of the lysosomal hydrolase represents one characteristic of rapidly proliferating neoplastic cells.
...
PMID:Lysosomal arylsulfatases of human leukocytes: increment of phosphorylated B variants in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 613 78
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