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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The glycosidases, enzymes which participate in the degradation of glycoproteins and glycolipids inside the lysosomes are themselves glycoproteins and, for one enzyme, several forms may be isolated in tissues and in biological fluids, corresponding to variations in the composition or the structure of their glycanic moiety. We have previously studied the different forms of
alpha-L-fucosidase
in human serum, kidney and urine. Some modifications of the glycanic fraction of glycoproteins have been described in various forms of tumoral cells; therefore, we have attempted to verify if the
alpha-L-fucosidase
of blood cells might be a useful marker in the diagnosis of leukemias, using the enzymic pattern obtained by chromatographic or electrofocusing methods. Detergent extracts from normal lymphocytes, submitted to ion-exchange chromatography as well as to chromatofocusing, revealed the presence of two forms of
alpha-L-fucosidase
, A and B, with respective pIs of 5.7 and 6.2. After treatment by neuraminidase, these two forms remain distinct, showing that the degrees of sialylation is not the only difference. Moreover, after desialylation, the two forms have not the same affinity for concanavalin A, an argument for the heterogeneity of the glycanic structures. The determination of the total activity, and of enzymic patterns of
alpha-L-fucosidase
from leukemic cells led to the observation of three types of modifications, in comparison with normal lymphocytes: quantitative variations in the total activity; variations in the proportions of the two forms; variations due to the modification of pIs. We have studied the lymphocytes from four patients with a hairy-cell
leukemia
(HCL), four patients with chronic lymphoid leukemia (CLL) and the MO cell-line, proceeding from a HCL. In all cases, the total fucosidase activity is strongly decreased in comparison with normal lymphocytes activity. The chromatofocusing pattern for CLL cells reveals the presence of the A and B forms, without modification of their eluting pH. A characteristic pattern is obtained with hairy cells, presenting only the B form, eluted in more acidic conditions. The normal lymphocytes in peripheral blood are for 80 per cent of the T phenotype, and the CLL lymphocytes exhibit the phenotypic markers B, as well as the hairy cells, but the MO cell-line acquires in culture the T markers. As these last cells express both the A and B forms of enzyme, the absence of the A form of
alpha-L-fucosidase
seems to be a marker of the HCL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Alpha-L-fucosidase of normal and pathological blood cells]. 186 62
alpha-L-Fucosidase isoenzymes pattern in hairy cell
leukaemia
(HCL) is characterized by the disappearance of the more acidic form when compared to normal lymphocytes. Our data seem to indicate that this profile could not be related to the T or B phenotype because in normal lymphocytes (mainly T), MO cells possessing T markers, as well as lymphocytes from chronic lymphoid
leukaemia
(CLL) known to exhibit normal-like B phenotypes two
alpha-L-fucosidase
forms are identified and especially the more acidic one.
...
PMID:Alpha-L-fucosidase isoenzyme pattern in hairy cell leukaemia. 233 87
alpha-L-Fucosidase (
EC 3.2.1.51
; FUS) activity and isoenzyme characteristics were analyzed in normal lymphocytes, normal (polymorphonuclear leukocytes, PMNs), and myeloid and lymphoid leukemic cells. Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) lymphocytes had a lower mean specific activity than normal lymphocytes (2.5 vs. 4.0, p less than 0.05). Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) blasts had a higher mean specific activity compared to normal lymphocytes (9.7 vs. 4.0; p less than 0.001), CLL lymphocytes (9.7 vs. 2.5; p less than 0.001), and acute myeloid leukemic (AML) blasts (9.7 vs. 7.6; p = NS). Normal PMNs had a higher mean specific activity than normal lymphocytes (7.0 vs. 4.0; p less than 0.05) but similar activity when compared to CML cells or AML blasts. Blasts from acute myelomonocytic
leukemia
(AMMoL) patients had higher activity than normal PMNs (9.0 vs. 7.0; p greater than 0.05). The isoenzyme patterns of normal and leukemic granulocytes and lymphocytes were obtained by automated chromatofocusing on PBE-94 microcolumns with normal and leukemic lymphocyte lysates. With normal and leukemic lymphoid lysates two major isoenzyme components (B and A) were isolated. The isoenzyme patterns of PMN, AML, CML, and AMMoL revealed three major peaks (B, A, I), totally different from those seen in lymphoid cells. The patterns of AML, CML, and PMN appeared to be similar to each other; however, the isoenzyme pattern obtained from AMMoL cells could be distinguished from the others by a prominent I peak. Thus, the FUS isoenzyme profile distinguishes the blasts of AMMoL from AML; and AMMol and AML from ALL.
...
PMID:Distinct alpha-L-fucosidase isoenzyme profiles in human leukemic cells. 360 77
Lysosomal enzyme activities were studied in cells derived from the following types of
leukaemia
: chronic myeloid, acute myeloid, acute myelomonocytic, acute monocytic, non-T, non-B cell acute lymphoblastic, T-cell acute lymphoblastic, B-cell chronic lymphocytic and T-cell chronic lymphocytic. Activities of beta-hexosaminidase and alpha-mannosidase were significantly higher in cells from acute monocytic and acute myelomonocytic leukaemias, and somewhat higher in the other myeloid leukaemias, when compared with control granulocytes. Activities of beta-hexosaminidase, alpha-mannosidase,
alpha-fucosidase
, beta-glucuronidase and acid phosphatase were markedly lower in B cells of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia when compared with control or other leukaemic lymphoid cells. On isoelectric focusing abnormal patterns of beta-hexosaminidase, alpha-mannosidase and beta-glucuronidase activities were commonly found in myeloid and non-T, non-B cell leukaemias. All patients with acute myeloid leukaemia exhibited a relative decrease in the B form of beta-hexosaminidase activity. The results described show that studies on lysosomal enzymes may assist in the classification of different types of
leukaemia
.
...
PMID:Correlation of lysosomal enzyme abnormalities in various forms of adult leukaemia. 622 22
A new common region of virus integration, Evi11, has been identified in two retrovirally induced murine myeloid leukemia cell lines, NFS107 and NFS78. By interspecific backcross analysis, it was shown that Evi11 is located at the distal end of mouse chromosome 4, in a region that shows homology with human 1p36. The genes encoding the peripheral cannabinoid receptor (Cnr2) and
alpha-L-fucosidase
(Fuca1) were identified near the integration site by using a novel exon trapping system. Cnr2 is suggested to be the target gene for viral interference in Evi11, since proviruses are integrated in the first intron of Cnr2 and retroviral integrations alter mRNA expression of Cnr2 in NFS107 and NFS78. In addition, proviral integrations were demonstrated within the 3' untranslated region of Cnr2 in five independent newly derived CasBrM-MuLV (mouse murine
leukemia
virus) tumors, CSL13, CSL14, CSL16, CSL27, and CSL97. The Cnr2 gene encodes a seven-transmembrane G-protein-coupled receptor which is normally expressed in hematopoietic tissues. Our data suggest that the peripheral cannabinoid receptor gene might be involved in leukemogenesis as a result of aberrant expression of Cnr2 due to retroviral integration in Evi11.
...
PMID:The genes encoding the peripheral cannabinoid receptor and alpha-L-fucosidase are located near a newly identified common virus integration site, Evi11. 926 4