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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A novel human myeloid cell line, designated HSM-1, has been established from the pleural effusion of a patient with granulocytic sarcoma (GS) who had been followed as having primary myelofibrosis for 10 years. When he was diagnosed as having granulocytic sarcoma in dermal tissues, no evidence of malignant transformation into
leukaemia
was found in both the peripheral blood and bone marrow. The established cell line was positive for myeloperoxidase, Sudan black B, Naphthol AS-D chloroacetate esterase. Surface marker analysis revealed that HSM-1 expressed CD4, CD13, CD11a, CD11b, Leu8, CD49b, CD49d,
CD49e
, CD29 and HLA-DR. To clarify why the unusual myeloid tumours developed in non-haematopoietic tissues, we examined the capability of HSM-1 to bind to skin fibroblast layers. The HSM-1 cells were found to bind to both bone marrow stromal layers and skin fibroblast layers. Among the other myeloid cell lines tested, none was found to bind to skin fibroblast layers. These findings suggest that the GS cell line may be derived from a haematopoietic precursor cell which can bind to skin fibroblasts and is localized in non-haematopoietic tissues resulting in the formation of extramedullary myeloid metaplasia. HSM-1 is a useful tool for analysing the characteristics of granulocytic sarcoma and homing receptors for haematopoietic stem cells.
...
PMID:Establishment of a novel granulocytic sarcoma cell line which can adhere to dermal fibroblasts from a patient with granulocytic sarcoma in dermal tissues and myelofibrosis. 141 99
VLA-1 to VLA-6 are cell-surface molecules binding to matrix molecules such as collagen, fibronectin, epiligrin, and laminin. In addition, VLA-4 binds to VCAM-1 and ICAM-2, thus mediating intercellular adhesion prerogative for lymphocyte extravasation or 'homing'. Using frozen tissue of normal lymphoid organs and of 100 morphologically and immunologically typed B cell neoplasias, monoclonal antibodies to all six VAL-alpha and to the common beta-chain were applied to serial sections. VLAs were found differentially expressed in cytologically and microtopographically defined B-cell subsets [follicular mantle zone cells (MZ), follicular center cells (FC), extrafollicular cells (EF), and plasma cells (PC)] of normal spleen, lymph node, and thymic medulla (which contains an EF compartment). Thus, these cell types, which correspond to discrete stages of B cell development, can also be defined by their VLA status. Acute B lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) was VLA-1-, 2-, 3 +/-, 4 +/-, 5 +/-, 6-. The VLA-1-, -2 +/-, 3+, -4+, -5+, -6-phenotype of chronic B lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) resembled that of MZ. Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) differed from CLL in its tendency to lack VLA-2, in its consistent lack of VLA-3, and altogether resembled splenic EF in its VLA profile. Mantle zone lymphoma (MZL) consistently expressed VLA-3 and -4 and frequently
VLA-5
. Nodal follicular center cell lymphomas (FCCL) were VLA-1- and -2- and very rarely expressed
VLA-5
and -6. Thus, FCCL although roughly corresponding to FC, tended to aberrantly express VLA-3 and/or VLA-4. Burkitt's lymphoma resembled FCCL but expressed VLA-4 more frequently and at higher levels. Mediastinal clear cell lymphoma of B-cell type differed from FCCL in its regular lack of VLA-3, -5, and -6 and in frequently lacking VLA-4. Medullary plasmacytoma was VLA-1-, -2-, -3 +/-, -4 +/-, -5-, -6+, thus being the only B cell neoplasia which was consistently VLA-6+. With respect to the well-known clinical characteristics of the B cell malignancies examined, the leukemic phenotype might crucially depend on the presence of
VLA-5
.
Leukemia
1992 Apr
PMID:Adhesion molecules VLA-1 to VLA-6 define discrete stages of peripheral B lymphocyte development and characterize different types of B cell neoplasia. 158 89
Recently we reported the expression of the human natural killer cell associated antigen CD56 (Leu 19/NKH1) in plasma cells of a majority of multiple myeloma (MM) patients. CD56 is known to be an isoform of the human neural adhesion molecule N-CAM which is involved in homotypic adhesive interactions. By immunophenotyping using four CD56 specific monoclonal antibodies and immunoprecipitation analysis we here confirm that the Leu 19 antigen expressed by myeloma plasma cells is identical to N-CAM and corresponds to the 145 kDa isoform. Because of the possible biological role of adhesion molecules on myeloma cells, we compared the expression of N-CAM with the intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) and the beta 1 and beta 2 integrins. By immunogold-silver staining of cytospin preparations of mononuclear cell suspensions, bone marrow plasma cells of 17 MM patients were analysed. Plasma cells expressed N-CAM (CD56) in 14 patients. ICAM-1 (CD54) in 16 patients, and beta 2 integrins (CD18) in eight patients. beta 1 integrins (CD29) were expressed in all patients. The expression of beta 2 integrins was always very weak while N-CAM, ICAM-1 and the beta 1 integrins showed a moderate to strong positivity. The plasma cells of five haematological normal individuals lacked significant N-CAM expression but were positive for ICAM-1 and both integrin subgroups. One plasma cell
leukaemia
patient and two out of four end-stage MM patients showed no expression of N-CAM or beta 2 integrins on their circulating plasma cells. Among 11 previously established myeloma cell lines, surface expression of ICAM-1 and the integrins was detected in most cases, while N-CAM was present in only four lines. Most cell lines showed coexpression of the fibronectin receptors (VLA-4 and
VLA-5
) and the laminin receptor (VLA-6). The collagen receptor (VLA-2) was not expressed. The N-CAM negative cell lines included four cell lines that were derived from plasma cell
leukaemia
patients. These results indicate that the expression of adhesion molecules is an intrinsic part of the biology of multiple myeloma.
...
PMID:Expression of cytoadhesion molecules (CD56, CD54, CD18 and CD29) by myeloma plasma cells. 172 26
Most cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) arise from malignant transformation of B-cell precursors in the bone marrow. Recent studies have shown that normal and leukemic B-cell precursors bind to bone marrow stromal cells through the beta-1 integrins VLA-4 and
VLA-5
, thereby exposing early lymphoid cells to regulatory cytokines. It has been recently reported that the pre-B cell line NALM-6 is capable of migrating under layers of murine stromal cells in vitro (Miyake et al. J Cell Biol 1992;119:653-662). We have further analyzed leukemic cell motility using human bone marrow fibroblasts (BMF) as a stromal layer. The precursor-B ALL cell line NALM-6 rapidly adhered to BMF, and underwent migration or tunneling into BMF layers within 5 h, as demonstrated by light and electron microscopy, and confirmed by a chromium-labeling assay. Migration was also observed with the precursor-B ALL lines Reh and KM-3, with a T
leukemia
line RPMI-8402, the monocytic line U937, and the mature B line Daudi. In contrast, mature B (Raji), myeloid (K562, HL-60), and T lines (CCRF-CEM, MOLT-4) did not migrate. When cases of
leukemia
were analyzed, BMF migration was largely confined to precursor-B ALL, occurring in eight of 13 cases tested. Of other types of
leukemia
, migration was observed in one of four cases of T-ALL, but no evidence was seen in six acute myeloid leukemias and two patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Only minimal migration into BMF was observed with purified sorted CD10+ CD19+ early B cells from normal adult marrow, while normal mature B lymphocytes from peripheral blood did not migrate. ALL migration was inhibited by monoclonal antibodies to the beta sub-unit of the VLA integrin family, and by a combination of antibodies to VLA-4 and
VLA-5
. Partial inhibition was also observed when leukemic cells were incubated with antibodies to VLA-4,
VLA-5
, or VLA-6 alone. In contrast, treatment of stromal cells with antibodies to vascular cell adhesion molecule or fibronectin (ligands of VLA-4 and
VLA-5
) did not prevent leukemic cell migration. These results indicate that ALL cells are highly motile and capable of rapid migration within marrow stroma, an effect largely mediated by VLA-4 and
VLA-5
. In the case of precursor-B ALL, this process may reflect a homing mechanism to areas of selective growth advantage within the bone marrow microenvironment.
Leukemia
1994 Oct
PMID:Migration of acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells into human bone marrow stroma. 752 99
Interactions between hematopoietic cells and the stromal microenvironment are mediated by membrane-bound adhesion molecules. As the expression patterns of these molecules may alter the adhesive qualities of leukemic blasts, leukemic samples were investigated for the expression of beta 1-, beta 2-, beta 3-integrins, CD44, the three selectins and several members of the immunoglobulin family. CD44 (167/169), LFA-3 (158/169), the beta 1-integrins VLA-4 (120/123) and
VLA-5
(45/51) and the beta 2-integrin LFA-1 (149/157) were found on > 70% of blasts in most cases of leukemias. Other molecules were restricted to specific differentiation stages and lineage. The beta 2-integrins Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) and gp 150,95 (CD11c/CD18) were preferentially expressed on M4 and M5 subtypes, and NCAM (CD56) was only found on a subset of acute myeloid leukemias (17/113). Unexpectedly, the beta 1-integrins VLA-1 (1/51), VLA-2 (18/123), VLA-3 (5/43), VLA-6 (15/29) and the E-selectin (2/47) were expressed on > 70% blasts on a subset of leukemias of varied phenotype. These molecules were absent on normal CD34+ bone marrow precursors. The simultaneous analysis generally revealed a higher percentage of positive blasts in the blood than in bone marrow. Our observations therefore suggest that in
leukemia
these antigens are displayed on a non-adherent population that is defective and is unable to convert to an adherent, functionally active conformational state.
Leukemia
1995 May
PMID:Differential expression of adhesion molecules in acute leukemia. 753 15
In this study we have demonstrated that natural killer (NK) cells adhere to elements of the bone marrow stroma (BMS) including fibroblasts, fibronectin and laminin but not to collagen type I, vitronectin and hyaluronic acid. NK cells bind to fibronectin and laminin using the beta 1 integrins VLA-4 and
VLA-5
, and VLA-6 respectively. The mechanism of adhesion to bone marrow fibroblasts is more complicated with beta 1 and beta 2 integrins being partially responsible but the majority of adhesion remaining unexplained. IL-2 stimulation of NK cells resulted in an increase in the expression of adhesion molecules involved in binding of NK cells to bone marrow fibroblasts (BMF) and extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins including the beta 1 chain CD29, alpha chains of VLA-4 and 5, beta 2 chain CD18 and alpha L chain CD11a. A marked increase in expression of beta 7 was also observed. There was a significant increase in the adhesion of NK cells to fibronectin in response to IL-2 treatment. NK cells also bound more strongly to BMF following IL-2 treatment although the development of cytotoxicity appeared to interfere with the adhesion assay. NK cells competitively inhibit the binding of AML blasts but not ALL blasts to BMF. Mechanisms underlying the inhibition of leukemic growth by NK and LAK cells may include direct and cytokine mediated cytotoxicity and perturbation of the interaction of leukemic blasts with the bone marrow stroma which is essential for blast cell survival.
Leukemia
1995 Jun
PMID:Natural killer cells adhere to bone marrow fibroblasts and inhibit adhesion of acute myeloid leukemia cells. 759 92
Adhesion of hematopoietic progenitor cells to marrow-derived adherent cells has been noted for erythroid, myeloid, and lymphoid precursors. In this report, we have characterized very late antigen (VLA) integrin expression on normal CD34+ marrow progenitors, on leukemic cell lines, and on blasts from patients with acute myelogenous or monocytic leukemias. CD34+ progenitor cells expressed the integrin beta 1 chain (CD29), VLA-4 alpha (CD49d), and
VLA-5
alpha (
CD49e
). The myeloid lines KG1 and KG1a also expressed CD49d and
CD49e
as did the Mo7e megakaryoblastic line. CD29, CD18, and CD11a were also present on each of these cell lines. Only the Mo7e line expressed the cytoadhesins GPIIbIIIa or GPIb. Binding of KG1a to marrow stroma was partially inhibited by antibodies to CD49d and its ligand, vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM-1). The majority of leukemic blasts studied expressed CD49d and
CD49e
as well. Blasts from patients with acute myelomonocytic
leukemia
consistently bound to stroma at levels greater than 20%, and adhesion to stroma could in some cases be partly inhibited by anti-CD49d. No role for glycosylphosphatidyl-inositol (GPI)-linked structures was demonstrated in these binding assays because the adhesion of leukemic blasts to stroma was not diminished after treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). These studies indicate that CD34+ myeloid progenitors, myeloid leukemic cell lines, and leukemic blasts possess a similar array of VLA integrins. Their functional importance individually or in combination with other mediators of attachment in adhesion, transendothelial migration, and differentiation has yet to be fully elucidated.
...
PMID:Expression of integrins and examination of their adhesive function in normal and leukemic hematopoietic cells. 767 62
The molecules effecting adhesion of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells are not well defined. We investigated the expression of very late activation (VLA) integrins in five human leukemic cell lines of pre-B cell phenotype. VLA-4 was found to be the dominant integrin in all five, three possessed
VLA-5
, and one VLA-6. None had VLA-2, or VLA-3. Since certain anti-VLA-4 monoclonal antibodies (mAb) have been reported to induce homotypic aggregation of T and B lymphocytes we investigated the possibility that VLA-4 might be involved in aggregation of pre-B cells. mAb 44H6 (anti-VLA-alpha 4), and 4B4 (anti-VLA-beta 1) induced strong aggregation which was not blocked by the anti-FC gamma IIR mAb IV.3. However, aggregation was effected in only three of the five lines suggesting the involvement of molecules other than VLA-4. The level of expression of CD9, but not that of CD11a, CD18, CD19, CD44, or CD54, was found to correlate with the level of aggregation. Of mAb directed to CD9, CD19, CD44, endoglin, and HLA-DR only mAb to CD9 induced aggregation. Admixture of mAb ALB6 (anti-CD9) and mAb 44H6 neither potentiated nor inhibited the response indicating a common effector mechanism. We suggest that the level of CD9 may determine the level of VLA-regulated adhesion, and therefore the adhesive phenotype of leukemic pre-B cells.
Leukemia
1993 Jan
PMID:Homotypic aggregation of pre-B leukemic cell lines by antibodies to VLA integrins correlates with their expression of CD9. 767 18
Adhesion molecules of the integrin family are implicated not only in leukocyte migration but also in leukocyte activation. Here we characterize the expression and function of fibronectin receptor integrins on rat mast cells. A rat basophilic
leukemia
cell line (RBL-2H3) and phorbol ester-stimulated rat peritoneal mast cells adhered to fibronectin (FN), vitronectin and fibrinogen. These mast cells expressed fibronectin receptor integrins, including very late antigen (VLA)-4,
VLA-5
and vitronectin receptor (VNR), as estimated by immunofluorescent staining and inhibition of FN adherence by newly established mAbs reactive with the rat alpha 4 (MR alpha 4-1), alpha 5 (HM alpha 5-1) or beta 3 (HM beta 3-1) chains of the integrin molecules. The beta-hexosaminidase release, a marker for mast cell degranulation, triggered by high affinity IgE receptor (Fc epsilon RI)-mediated stimulation, was enhanced by adhesion of RBL-2H3 cells to either immobilized FN, MR alpha 4-1, HM alpha 5-1 or HM beta 3-1. This FN enhancement of beta-hexosaminidase release was inhibited by soluble MR alpha 4-1, HM alpha 5-1 and HM beta 3-1 as well as by GRGDSP and DELPQLVTLPHPNHLGPEILDVPST peptides which abrogate
VLA-5
/VNR and VLA-4 binding to FN respectively. In vivo, passive cutaneous anaphylaxis induced by IgE anti-DNP and DNP-BSA was inhibited by concurrent s.c. injection of MR alpha 4-1, HM alpha 5-1 and HM beta 3-1. These results demonstrate that FN receptor integrins expressed on rat mast cells play an important role in regulating mast cell activation both in vitro and in vivo.
...
PMID:Expression and function of fibronectin binding integrins on rat mast cells. 773 20
The diagnostic and prognostic value of immunophenotyping with 18 murine monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) to a variety of leukocyte differentiation antigens was assessed in 168 adults aged 15 to 60 years with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Patients were entered on the multicentre Australian
Leukaemia
Study Group M4 protocol, and were randomized to receive either standard or high-dose Ara-C together with daunorubicin and etoposide as induction chemotherapy, followed by standard consolidation and maintenance therapy. Diagnostic bone marrow aspirate (152 cases) or peripheral blood samples (16) were analyzed by indirect immunofluorescence and flow cytometry. MoAbs used were directed at myeloid (CD11b, CD13, CD14, CD15, CD33, CD41), lymphoid (CD2, CD3, CD7, CD9, CD10, CD19), or stem cell (HLA-DR, CD34, c-kit receptor) antigens, as well as the leukocyte integrins CD18 and
CD49e
, and the transferrin receptor CD71. Of the myeloid markers, CD13 and CD33 were the most useful diagnostically (71% and 79% of cases positive, respectively), with CD11b, CD14, and CD15 less commonly positive. A minority of cases expressed lymphoid antigens, either T cell (CD2 16%, CD3 7%, CD7 28%) or B cell (CD10 2%, CD19 7%). CD34 was detected on 42% and c-kit receptor on 48%. When patients were analyzed for response to treatment, CD2, CD9, and CD14 were significantly associated with complete remission rate: cases expressing these antigens had a poorer response than negative cases. In univariate analysis, CD11b+ cases had shorter periods of remission (relative risk of relapse, 2.33; P = .003) and shorter survival (relative death rate, 1.91; P = .006). In multivariate analysis, adjusting for other prognostic factors, CD9 and CD11b were significantly predictive of shorter survival. No other marker had a significant predictive effect. We conclude that myeloid MoAbs are useful in confirming the diagnosis of AML, but their prognostic value may be limited to CD11b. Lymphoid antigen expression is a consistent phenomenon in a minority of cases of AML, but appears to have little clinical significance.
...
PMID:Prognostic value of immunophenotyping in acute myeloid leukemia. Australian Leukaemia Study Group. 804 37
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