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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One of the first clones of the Wilms tumor 1 (
WT1)
gene, WT33, was isolated from a B cell
leukemia
cell line in 1990. Now, 12 years on, WT1 has emerged as a potentially important target for antileukemic therapies. Our understanding of the role that WT1 plays during normal hematopoiesis is still limited, and there is a large amount of conflicting data concerning the precise manner in which WT1 gene expression contributes to leukemogenesis. However, interest in this field has intensified in the past 5 years. This review surveys the progress made in this area.
...
PMID:A review of the Wilms' tumor 1 gene (WT1) and its role in hematopoiesis and leukemia. 1220 48
The Wilms tumor gene (
WT1)
is expressed in blasts of patients with acute leukemia, irrespective of lineage, and WT1 nuclear protein is detectable in the majority of such blasts. Only very few physiologic hematopoietic progenitors express WT1, but the WT1 expression level of these progenitors and that of leukemic blasts are comparable. Although not specific for acute hematologic malignant diseases, continuous WT1 expression in almost all leukemic blasts strikingly contrasts to its rather transient expression in very few physiologic hematopoietic progenitors. Quantitative and semiquantitative WT1 reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) protocols have limitations in discriminating physiologic from pathologic overall WT1 expression levels in mononuclear cell preparations. Because of these limitations, reports conflict on the usefulness of long-term monitoring of WT1 expression in patients with acute leukemia. Real-time quantitative WT1 RT-PCR protocols, however, have been developed and tested in small series of patients with acute leukemia. Such protocols hold promise to enable evaluation of the individual treatment response (short-term monitoring) and early diagnosis of imminent relapse through the detection and long-term monitoring of minimal residual disease in patients with acute leukemia. These protocols also should facilitate the notoriously difficult distinction between eosinophilic
leukemia
and hypereosinophilic syndromes. Data on WT1 expression in leukemic blasts and their physiologic counterparts are discussed in light of clinical relevance.
...
PMID:Wilms tumor gene (WT1) expression as a panleukemic marker. 1221 7
Using the allo-restricted T-cell approach to circumvent tolerance, we have previously identified a cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitope in the transcription factor Wilms tumor antigen 1 (
WT1)
presented by HLA-A0201 (A2) class I molecules. Here we describe an additional A2-presented epitope and show that CTLs against both epitopes kill WT1-expressing
leukemia
cell lines. Colony-forming assays demonstrated that both types of CTL killed CD34(+) progenitor cells from A2(+)
leukemia
patients, but not from A2(+) healthy individuals. The long-term culture-initiating cell (LTC-IC) assay was used to analyze the killing activity of WT1-specific CTLs against the more immature fraction of CD34(+) cells. The CTLs killed LTC-ICs of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), whereas the function of normal CD34(+) progenitor/stem cells was not inhibited. Together, the data show that CTLs specific for 2 distinct peptide epitopes of WT1 can discriminate between normal and
leukemia
LTC-ICs, suggesting that such CTLs have the potential to selectively kill CML progenitor/stem cells.
...
PMID:Two distinct HLA-A0201-presented epitopes of the Wilms tumor antigen 1 can function as targets for leukemia-reactive CTL. 1241 26
The advanced understanding of the molecular biology and immunology of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) has led to novel therapeutic strategies unique to this disease. CML responds to immune-mediated therapies, including stem cell transplantation, donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI), and interferon alfa. T cells and other immune effectors are implicated in the mechanisms of action of these immune therapies. Recently, clinical observations supported by laboratory data have demonstrated the presence of CML-specific T cells in patients. Several proteins may potentially act as
leukemia
-specific antigens for major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted cytotoxicity in CML, and active specific therapies (vaccines) are in development. Antigens under investigation include bcr-abl, PR1, Wilms tumor protein (
WT1)
, minor histocompatibility antigens (mH), CML-66, CML-28, and survivin. Other strategies target vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitors or make use of CML-derived dendritic cells (DC).
...
PMID:Novel targeted and immunotherapeutic strategies in chronic myeloid leukemia. 1256 15
We established a real-time PCR method that can simultaneously detect 10 different fusion transcripts (major, minor and micro BCR/ABL, AML1/MTG8, PML/RARalpha, CBFbeta/MYH11, TEL/AML1, E2A/PBX1, MLL/AF4, and MLL/AF9) together with Wilms' tumor gene (
WT1)
transcripts. This screening method allowed the processing of six specimens concomitantly and required only one working day from RNA extraction to final results. Fifty-seven bone marrow (BM) samples from patients with acute leukemia were retrospectively screened for the presence of fusion and WT1 transcripts without knowledge of the cytogenetic data, and the fusion transcripts were detected in 20 of 57 samples (35.1%). The concordance between the present method and cytogenetic analysis was examined in 38 samples in which the cytogenetic data were available. In 12 of 38 samples, the PCR results agreed with the cytogenetic data, whereas in 4 of the remaining 26 samples, the translocations were detected by real-time PCR alone because of the insufficient number of metaphases obtained and presumably the submicroscopic or masked translocations. The WT1 levels ranged from 400 to 690,000 copies/microg RNA in BM from
leukemia
patients, whereas 0-470 copies/microg RNA were found in BM cells from BMT donors. This real-time PCR method enables rapid and efficient characterization of acute leukemia in addition to subsequent evaluation of minimal residual diseases.
...
PMID:Rapid screening of leukemia fusion transcripts in acute leukemia by real-time PCR. 1261 15
Leukemia
is a disease characterized by the malignant transformation of hematopoietic stem cells. Previous studies have shown that the Wilms' tumor antigen-1 (
WT1)
transcription factor is expressed at elevated levels in hematopoietic stem cells of
leukemia
patients compared with normal stem cells. In the past, we have generated cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) specific for WT1, and we have shown that they killed WT1-expressing
leukemia
cell lines and inhibited the in vitro colony-forming activity of
leukemia
cells of patients. We used a xenotransplantation model to address whether WT1-specific CTL can selectively inhibit engraftment of malignant but not normal stem cells. CD34+ hematopoietic cells isolated from individuals with chronic myeloid leukemia or normal hematopoiesis were treated with WT1-specific CTL and injected into immunodeficient non-obese diabetic-severe combined immunodeficient mice. After 5 to 8 weeks, engraftment of leukemic or normal human cells was analyzed using immunohistology, flow cytometry, and polymerase chain reaction amplification of human sequences. The data showed that exposure of chronic myeloid leukemia CD34+ cells to WT1-specifc CTL completely prevented the development of
leukemia
in the recipient mice, whereas CTL treatment did not inhibit engraftment of normal CD34+ stem cells. The experiments indicate that WT1-specific CTL can discriminate between stem cells that give raise to
leukemia
and normal hematopoiesis in the xenogenic transplantation model. This supports the use of CTL with this specificity for treatment of
leukemia
patients undergoing stem-cell transplantation.
...
PMID:Human cytotoxic T lymphocytes specific for Wilms' tumor antigen-1 inhibit engraftment of leukemia-initiating stem cells in non-obese diabetic-severe combined immunodeficient recipients. 1279 92
Among clinicians, initial awareness of the Wilms' tumor gene was limited mostly to pediatric oncologists. Almost a decade ago, overexpression of Wilms' tumor 1 (
WT1)
was observed in adult acute leukemia. Subsequent studies indicated that WT1 overexpression occurs in most cases of acute myelogenous leukemia, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Limited tissue expression of WT1 in adults suggests that WT1 can be a target for
leukemia
/MDS therapy. WT1 expression in stem/progenitor cells remains unsettled. However, lack of progenitor cell suppression by WT1 antisense or WT1-specific cytotoxic T cells provide some assurance that WT1 expression in progenitor cells is minimal or absent. Immunotherapy-based WT1 approaches are furthest along in preclinical development. WT1-specific cytotoxic lymphocytes can be generated from normals and leukemic patients. In mice, WT1 vaccines elicit specific immune responses without evidence of tissue damage. In this paper, we review studies validating the immunogenicity of WT1 and propose that
leukemia
and MDS may be a good clinical model to test the efficacy of a WT1 vaccine.
Leukemia
2003 Jul
PMID:WT1 in acute leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome: therapeutic potential of WT1 targeted therapies. 1283 18
We have developed a sensitive, competitive, nested reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) titration assay that quantifies the number of Wilm's tumour (
WT1)
gene transcripts in bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB), coupled with a competitive RT-PCR protocol for the ABL gene as control. We studied BM/PB samples from 107 acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) patients and 22 acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL) patients at presentation and detected the WT1 gene in > 90% of patients by a qualitative assay. Quantitative analysis of WT1 transcript at presentation in 66 patients (52 AML, 14 ALL) correlated significantly with remission rate, disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) (P = 0.003). WT1 levels were normalized to 105ABL transcripts. Within good and standard cytogenetic risk groups, high WT1 levels correlated with poorer outcome. Serial quantification was performed in 35 patients (28 AML, seven ALL); those with less than 103 copies of WT1 after induction and second consolidation chemotherapy had significantly better DFS and OS. Fourteen patients have relapsed with a median complete remission duration of 12 (range 4-49) months. We detected a rise in WT1 levels in nine out of 14 patients, 2-4 months before the onset of haematological relapse, whereas in the remaining five patients, WT1 levels remained persistently high during the disease course. WT1 levels were lower in PB than in BM, but mirrored changes in the BM samples and were equally informative. We suggest that WT1 is a useful molecular target to monitor minimal residual disease in acute
leukaemia
, especially in cases without a specific fusion gene.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of quantitative analysis of WT1 gene transcripts by competitive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction in acute leukaemia. 1451 Sep 42
We previously showed that Wilms tumor gene (
WT1)
expression level, measured by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), was useful as an indicator of minimal residual disease (MRD) in
leukemia
and myelodysplastic syndrome. However, in conventional quantitative RT-PCR (CQ-PCR), RT-PCR must be performed for various numbers of cycles depending on WT1 expression level. In the present study, we developed a new real-time quantitative RT-PCR (RQ-PCR) method for quantitating WT1 transcripts. Results of intraassay and interassay variability tests demonstrated that the real-time WT1 assay had high reproducibility. WT1 expression levels measured by the RQ- and the CQ-PCR methods were strongly correlated (r = 0.998). Furthermore, a strong correlation was observed among WT1 transcript values normalized with 3 different control genes (beta-actin, ABL, and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) and between relative WT1 transcript values with WT1 expression in K562 cells as the reference and absolute WT1 transcript copy numbers per microgram RNA. When WT1 expression and minor bcr-abl expression were concurrently monitored in 2 patients with bcr-abl-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia, both MRDs changed mostly in parallel, indicating the reliability and validity of our RQ-PCR method. In conclusion, this RQ-PCR method is convenient and reliable for monitoring MRD and enables routine clinical use of a WT1 assay.
...
PMID:Monitoring minimal residual disease in leukemia using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction for Wilms tumor gene (WT1). 1468 94
Recent studies have detected Wilms tumor antigen (
WT1)
-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) and chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) and demonstrated that most of these CTLs were low avidity. Although HLA-mismatched donors can mount high-avidity CTLs against HLA-A2-presented peptides of WT1, a dominant anti-alloimmune response usually obscures detection of peptide-specific CTLs. Here we explored the feasibility of using recombinant HLA-A2 monomers containing single peptide epitopes as immunogens to generate peptide-specific CTLs from allogeneic donors. We demonstrate that the coating of HLA-A2(-) B lymphocytes with A2/peptide monomers provides a strong stimulus for autologous peptide-specific CTLs. After 3 to 5 rounds of stimulation a population of CD8(+) T cells binding A2/peptide tetramers is easily detectable by fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis. Furthermore, sorted A2/WT1 tetramer-positive CTLs display strong cytotoxic activity against
leukemia
cells expressing WT1 endogenously but not against WT1(-) human tumor cells. Thus, HLA/peptide monomers may be useful to isolate peptide-specific donor lymphocytes for treatment of patients with
leukemia
after HLA-mismatched transplantation.
...
PMID:Use of B cell-bound HLA-A2 class I monomers to generate high-avidity, allo-restricted CTLs against the leukemia-associated protein Wilms tumor antigen. 1498 55
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