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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A proportion of patients with blast crisis of CML have blast cells identical to those found in common non-T, non-B all, and whilst this disease is often referred to as lymphoid blast crisis (LBC), evidence is presented that it may in fact arise from a prelymphoid, pre-myeloid (pluripotential) stem cell. Recently developed membrane and enzyme markers (anti-ALL antiserum, TdT assay) have provided convenient diagnostic tests for the detection of LBC. The clinical and haematological features of LBC are reviewed: patients with LBC show a higher response rate to therapy with vincristine and prednisolone, and their survival may be significantly prolonged. The frequent occurrence of meningeal leukaemia suggests the need for prophylactic CNS therapy in LBC patients achieving remission.
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PMID:Lymphoblastic transformation of Ph1-positive chronic myeloid leukaemia: therapeutic implications and relevance to haemopoietic stem cell theory. 36 48

High activity of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (terminal transferase) was found in a new "thymus-dependent" cell line (RPMI 8402) which is of acute lymphoblastic leukemia origin. This enzyme resembled the terminal transferase from other human cells in all its properties including Km (0.7 x 10(-6) m for dGTP). The high activity of this enzyme in RPMI 8402 and fresh acute leukemia lymphoblasts, in contrast to the low activity of this enzyme reported for "thymus-independent' cells, suggested that this cell line may have originated from leukemia cells. Moreover, the high activity of terminal transferase in RPMI 8402 cells should make feasible large-scale purification of this enzyme for detailed studies.
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PMID:High terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase activity in a new T-cell line (RPMI 8402) of acute lymphoblastic leukemia origin. 80 34

Over a two-year period, immunophenotypic patterns of 266 acute leukemia cases were analyzed using a panel of tests including TdT, SmIg and 9 surface antigens by the immunofluorescence stains for the assessment of the incidence and grade of phenotypic ambiguity (lineage infidelity) and the possible clinical significance of unusual immunophenotypes. Immunophenotypes were classified into four groups according to the degree of ectopic antigen expression. We classified as Group A (91.7%, 244 of 266 cases) those expressing conventional pattern without ectopic antigen. Group B (3.0%, 8 of 266 cases) was defined to have at least two lineage specific markers and single ectopic antigen. Such a "low grade deviation" did not prevent a definite immunodiagnosis. Group C (4.2%, 11 of 266 cases) revealed a promiscuous coexpression of markers related to different lineages, including two cases (0.8%, 2 cases) of biphenotypic leukemia. Group D (1.1%, 3 cases) included unclassifiable immunophenotypes with no antigen or HLA-DR only expression. Both patients with biphenotypic leukemia and one patient with unclassifiable immunophenotypes failed to respond to induction chemotherapy, suggesting a poor prognosis in these patients. The incidence of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) cases with one or more ectopic surface antigens was 10 (8.1%) of the 124 AML cases. Ectopic antigen expression was seen in 5 (4%) of the 125 B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases and 3 (25%) of the 12 T-ALL cases. It is concluded that nearly 95% of cases of acute leukemia cases can be diagnosed accurately with immunophenotyping alone including patients with a mild degree of deviation from expected antigenic patterns.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Acute leukemias with unusual immunophenotypes. 129 44

The immunophenotype of leukaemia cells from 60 patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) was analysed with the APAAP technique using a panel of anti-myeloid and lymphoid associated monoclonal antibodies (McAb). Cells from all cases, including three with negative cytochemical features, were labelled by at least one of the anti-myeloid McAb CD13, anti-myeloperoxidase (anti-Mpo), and/or CD14. The most sensitive marker was CD13, since it was positive in 90% of cases. In two out of three AML cases defined as M0-AML, CD13 was expressed in the cytoplasm but not on the membrane; in these three cases peroxidase (Mpo) was not detected by conventional cytochemistry, but could be demonstrated in all of them using the McAb anti-Mpo. The simultaneous expression of CD14 and CD68 McAb was often confined to the M4 and M5 FAB AML subtypes (92% cases) as compared to the others: M1, M2, M3 (18% cases). Lymphoid antigens were rarely positive (TdT+: 13%, CD7+: 15%, CD19+: 5%) and none of the AML cases were CD3+ or CD10+. By contrast, CD4 was expressed in blasts from 44% of cases and this was not restricted to AML with a monocytic component (M4, M5) but also found in other subtypes. There were no significant differences in the clinical or prognostic features according to the positivity or negativity with TdT and CD4. By contrast, expression of CD7 was associated with refractoriness to the treatment or short complete remission duration, although the number of patients is too small to draw firm conclusions. Our findings support the clinical and diagnostic relevance of immunophenotypic studies in AML.
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PMID:The value of detecting surface and cytoplasmic antigens in acute myeloid leukaemia. 132 89

Changes in the localization of terminal transferase during the cell cycle in random cultures of human pre-T leukemia line RPMI-8402 were examined by light and electron microscopy on immunoperoxidase-stained preparations. Paraformaldehyde-fixed and saponin-permeabilized human cells were used with a monoclonal anti-human terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) primary reagent to demonstrate changes in enzyme distribution occurring between interphase and mitosis. Nuclear localization is found uniformly during interphase. At metaphase, however, the majority of TdT staining appears randomly distributed in the cytoplasm and traces of TdT staining remain associated with mitotic chromatin. At later phases, when the daughter cells are forming, the enzyme again appears to be restricted to the new nuclear structure.
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PMID:Intracellular localization of terminal transferase during the cell cycle. 139 93

We recently described an original epidemiological form of bovine leukosis in cattle. In the young female offspring of one bull, more than 3% of animals developed a thymic lymphoblastic lymphosarcoma. Of these, 31 cases, together with a lymphoid cell line established from one of the tumours, were phenotypically characterized. Characterization was done using a large combination of well clustered monoclonal antibodies, and monoclonal antibodies prepared in our laboratory by immunizing mice either with bovine normal lymphocytes or with tumour thymic cells. The thymic tumours and the cell line did not express any T lymphoid antigens but they did express some B lymphoid markers. The phenotype of the tumour cells was CD45+/-, CD44+/- TdT+, class II-DR+/-, CD19+/-, CD21-, Ig- and HBM 57+ (recognizing the mb-1 chains of the B-cell receptor). The cell line expressed a more mature phenotype: TdT-, CD45-, CD44+, class II-DR+, CD19+, CD21+/- and sIgG+. These results allow us to consider these tumours as B-cell derived. These B lymphosarcomas with a thymic localization are reminiscent of a human mediastinal non-lymphoblastic lymphoma reported as a primary mediastinal clear cell lymphoma. The possibility of a thymic or extrathymic origin for this B lymphosarcoma is discussed.
Leukemia 1992 Jul
PMID:Partial characterization of a familial B lymphosarcoma with a thymic localization in cattle. 162 88

Leukemias are characterized by an idiopathic proliferation of a progenitor cell that is committed to a single cell lineage. However, leukemias with dual-lineage differentiation are being described, especially within the pediatric age group. The authors reviewed 118 cases of adult acute leukemia phenotyped by immunofluorescent flow cytometry; 7 cases demonstrated mixed cell lineage. Immunophenotypically these cases were defined by early B-lymphocyte differentiation (TdT, HLA-DR, and CD19) coexpressed with a myeloid receptor (CD13, CD15, or CD33) on the same leukemic cell. Routine cytochemical evaluation demonstrated punctate positivity of the blasts with naphthol AS-D chloroacetate esterase stain in five of seven cases. Cytogenetic analysis revealed structural abnormalities of chromosome 11 in four of the seven cases. Three of these studies showed a break at 11q23-24, the location of the human proto-oncogene ets-1. Clinically, two of these leukemias represented chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast crisis, and all cases behaved aggressively. The authors' data suggest that mixed lineage leukemias are an identifiable subset of adult acute leukemias and are associated with a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Biphenotypic acute leukemia in adults. 169 92

Within normal hemopoiesis, the intranuclear DNA polymerase TdT seems to be exclusively expressed by T and B lymphoid precursor cells. Double staining experiments showed that TdT can also be expressed in blast cells of certain acute myeloid leukemias. Recent reports described a very strong association between TdT expression and rearrangements of IgH and TcR genes in such AML specimens, suggesting a predominant lymphoid commitment of these TdT positive AML blasts. When submitting 24 serologically and morphologically well-characterized TdT positive AML specimens for additional genotypic analysis to determine the IgH and TcR gene configuration, we observed that only four had clonally rearranged IgH and/or TcR genes, whereas 20 had germ line configuration. This frequency is clearly lower than previously reported and not necessarily different from rearrangement frequencies reported for TdT negative AML (4-40%). It would seem to us, therefore, that the expression of TdT in otherwise well-defined AML blasts is not necessarily associated with a higher frequency of immunoglobulin and/or T cell receptor gene rearrangement.
Leukemia 1990 Apr
PMID:Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase and CD7 expression in acute myeloid leukemias are not associated with a high frequency of immunoglobulin and/or T cell receptor gene rearrangement. 169 41

Maturation of adult human bone marrow (BM) B cells is accompanied by the sequential acquisition and loss of characteristic cell surface antigens (Loken et al., Blood 70:1316). Little is known about these changes in fetal BM B cells. In order to compare fetal with adult B cell development, we performed three-color, flow cytometric analyses of cell surface antigens, as well as nuclear TdT staining, on lymphoid cells from fetal BM. Mononuclear cells isolated from fetal BM (18-22 weeks) were stained with combinations of antibodies against CD3, CD10, CD19, CD20, CD21, CD22, CD34, CD45, PCA-1, IgM, and HLA-DR. Analysis of six separate fetal BM specimens indicated that combinations of cell surface antigens were expressed on analogous populations in fetal and adult BM. Consistent with adult BM, greater than 95% of TdT+ cells within the CD10+ population were CD34+, whereas less than 5% were CD34-. This CD10+/CD34+/TdT+ population constituted 30-40% of the total B cell compartment, compared with 10% in adults. Quantitative changes in CD45 expression on fetal BM B cells defined three clear populations, as has been observed in adults. In striking contrast to adult BM, greater than 95% of CD19+ and greater than 95% of surface IgM+ cells were CD10+, indicating that CD10 is a pan-B cell antigen in fetal BM. Virtually no mature B cells expressing CD21, CD22, or PCA-1 were detected in fetal BM. Our results indicate a preponderance of immature phenotypes exist in the fetal BM B cell compartment. These immature cells can be grouped into three distinct populations, and probably correspond to expanded populations found less frequently in adult BM. This striking increase in the earliest identifiable stages of B cell ontogeny is consistent with an active expansion of cells destined to constitute the humoral immune system during fetal development.
Leukemia 1990 May
PMID:Multiparameter flow cytometric analysis of human fetal bone marrow B cells. 169 9

Digallic acid (gallic acid 5,6-dihydroxy-3-carboxyphenyl ester) [4] was found to be a potent inhibitor of the activities of the reverse transcriptases from murine leukemia virus (MLV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Under the reaction conditions specified for each of MLV and HIV reverse transcriptases, both enzymes were inhibited by approximately 90% in the presence of 0.5 micrograms/ml digallic acid. Under the same conditions, however, gallic acid had no effect on the reverse transcriptase activity. The mode of the inhibition by digallic acid was partially competitive with respect to the template.primer, (rA)n.(dT)12-18', and noncompetitive to the triphosphate substrate, dTTP. The Ki value of digallic acid for HIV-reverse transcriptase was determined to be 0.58 microM. Examination of several derivatives of digallic acid have shown that all three hydroxyl groups at the 3, 4, and 5 positions seem to be required for the inhibitory activity of these compounds. Besides reverse transcriptase, DNA polymerases alpha and beta were moderately inhibited by digallic acid, whereas DNA polymerase gamma, terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase, and E. coli DNA polymerase I were virtually insensitive to inhibition by this compound.
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PMID:Differential inhibition of reverse transcriptase and various DNA polymerases by digallic acid and its derivatives. 170 74


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