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

A group of retroviruses carrying truncated viral genes has recently been suggested as the cause of new patterns of diseases. One such virus is the replication defective component of the Friend murine leukemia virus (F-MuLV) complex, called Friend spleen focus forming virus (F-SFFV). This virus induces erythroblastosis, and a virion envelope-related glycoprotein, gp55, encoded by F-SFFV has been suggested as the pathogenic gene. The role of the gp55 gene is, however, yet unclear in the apparently multistep erythroleukemogenesis. By separately producing transgenic mice harboring the whole F-SFFV DNA, the gp55 gene alone under the control of the retroviral long terminal repeat (LTR) and the gp55 gene under the control of cytoplasmic beta actin transcriptional regulatory unit, we show here that the gp55 gene is capable of inducing neoplastic proliferation of erythroid progenitor cells specifically in the absence of helper virus and other F-SFFV sequences. Under the control of the viral LTR the gp55 expression was detected only in leukemic tissues, but under the control of cytoplasmic beta-actin regulatory sequences, the gp55 was also expressed in a variety of normal tissues including preleukemic normal spleens. The development of erythroleukemia was suppressed under the genetic background of C57B1/6 mouse (resistant to F-MuLV; Fv-2rr), and required additional events even under the background of DDD mouse (susceptible to F-MuLV; Fv-2ss). The p53 and Spi-1 genes were frequently aberrant in transplanted tumors and cell lines derived from them, but were not in primary leukemic spleens.
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PMID:Env-derived gp55 gene of Friend spleen focus-forming virus specifically induces neoplastic proliferation of erythroid progenitor cells. 216 63

Alterations of the p53 anti-oncogene have recently been found to occur frequently in the blast crisis of chronic myelocytic leukaemia. The p53 gene may be altered by gross structural alterations or by point mutations in the coding sequence. We now report a novel mechanism of gene inactivation in a blast crisis cell line where a mutation in a splice donor site at the 5' end of the fifth intron of the gene interrupts RNA processing and gene expression.
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PMID:A splicing mutation accounts for the lack of p53 gene expression in a CML blast crisis cell line: a novel mechanism of p53 gene inactivation. 222 33

Twelve long-term cell lines were established from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) or cerebrospinal fluid cells of patients with human T lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-1) seropositive tropical spastic paraparesis (TSP) originating from the French West Indies, French Guyana or the Central African Republic. Most of these long-term interleukin-2-dependent cell lines exhibited a pattern characteristic of CD4(+)-activated T cells with high expression of CD2, CD3 and CD4 antigens, associated with a strong density of TAC and DR molecules. Nevertheless, in five cases CD8 expression was present at a significant level. HTLV-I antigens were never detected in uncultured PBMC, but they were expressed in a few cells after short-term culture and after 4 months the majority of the cells were HTLV-I positive, as demonstrated by indirect immunofluorescence (IF) using polyclonal or monoclonal anti-p19 and anti-p24 antibodies. Low and variable levels of reverse transcriptase activity were detected in supernatant fluids of these cell lines only after 4 months of culture, when at least 50% of the cells exhibited HTLV-I antigens by IF. However, numerous type C HTLV-I-like viral particles were detected, mostly in the extracellular spaces, with rare budding particles. Similar findings were found in three T cell lines derived from West Indian and African patients with adult T-cell leukaemia/lymphoma (ATLL). Differences in high Mr polypeptides were detected by Western blot in cell lysates when comparing TSP- or ATLL-derived T cell lines. Thus a signal of 62K was easily detectable in all the TSP lines, but not in the ATLL lines. In all cell lines bands corresponding to p53, p24 and p19 viral core polypeptides were present, as was the env gene-coded protein p46.
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PMID:Cell surface phenotype and human T lymphotropic virus type 1 antigen expression in 12 T cell lines derived from peripheral blood and cerebrospinal fluid of West Indian, Guyanese and African patients with tropical spastic paraparesis. 230 64

We report that highly purified human platelet factor 4 (PF4) inhibits human megakaryocytopoiesis in vitro. At greater than or equal to 25 micrograms/ml, PF4 inhibited megakaryocyte colony formation approximately 80% in unstimulated cultures, and approximately 58% in cultures containing recombinant human IL 3 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor. Because PF4 (25 micrograms/ml) had no effect on either myeloid or erythroid colony formation lineage specificity of this effect was suggested. A synthetic COOH-terminal PF4 peptide of 24, but not 13 residues, also inhibited megakaryocyte colony formation, whereas a synthetic 18-residue beta-thromboglobulin (beta-TG) peptide and native beta-TG had no such effect when assayed at similar concentrations. The mechanism of PF4-mediated inhibition was investigated. First, we enumerated total cell number, and examined cell maturation in control colonies (n = 200) and colonies (n = 100) that arose in PF4-containing cultures. Total cells per colony did not differ dramatically in the two groups (6.1 +/- 3.0 vs. 4.2 +/- 1.6, respectively), but the numbers of mature large cells per colony was significantly decreased in the presence of PF4 when compared with controls (1.6 +/- 1.5 vs. 3.9 +/- 2.3; P less than 0.001). Second, by using the human leukemia cell line HEL as a model for primitive megakaryocytic cells, we studied the effect of PF4 on cell doubling time, on the expression of both growth-regulated (H3, p53, c-myc,and c-myb), and non-growth-regulated (beta 2-microglobulin) genes. At high concentrations of native PF4 (50 micrograms/ml), no effect on cell doubling time, or H3 or p53 expression was discerned. In contrast, c-myc and c-myb were both upregulated. These results suggested the PF4 inhibited colony formation by impeding cell maturation, as opposed to cell proliferation, perhaps by inducing expression of c-myc and c-myb. The ability of PF4 to inhibit a normal cell maturation function was then tested. Megakaryocytes were incubated in synthetic PF4, or beta-TG peptides for 18 h and effect on Factor V steady-state mRNA levels was determined in 600 individual cells by in situ hybridization. beta-TG peptide had no effect on FV mRNA levels, whereas a approximately 60% decrease in expression of Factor V mRNA was found in megakaryocytes exposed to greater than or equal 100 ng/ml synthetic COOH-terminal PF4 peptide. Accordingly, PF4 modulates megakaryocyte maturation in vitro, and may function as a negative autocrine regulator of human megakaryocytopoiesis.
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PMID:Inhibition of human megakaryocytopoiesis in vitro by platelet factor 4 (PF4) and a synthetic COOH-terminal PF4 peptide. 252 11

The expression of the myeloperoxidase (MPO) gene was studied, by means of Northern blot analysis in 14 cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 11 cases of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and 6 cases of CML blast crisis, and in HL60 cells before and after induction of terminal differentiation with retinoic acid (RA), phorbol esters (TPA), or vitamin D. The expression of a panel of cell cycle-related genes, namely C-MYC, histone H3, ornithine decarboxylase, P53, vimentin, and calcyclin, was also studied in the same cell populations. Our results indicate that: (a) MPO gene expression (steady state mRNA levels) is strictly confined to the first stages of myeloid differentiation, reaching its peak at the promyelocyte stage and becoming undetectable in mature granulocytes and monocytes; (b) cells devoid of any detectable MPO enzymatic activity such as leukemic basophils have a high content of MPO mRNA; and (c) MPO gene expression is not related to the growth activity of the cell population. Finally, our results show that the pattern of expression of growth-regulated genes in the neoplastic myeloid disorders AML, CML, and CML blast crisis is remarkably different.
Leukemia 1989 Jun
PMID:Expression of the myeloperoxidase gene in acute and chronic myeloid leukemias: relationship to the expression of cell cycle-related genes. 254

Aberrations in nuclear proto-oncogene organisation and/or gene expression have been implicated in cell transformation mediated by the v-abl gene. For example, it has been suggested that amplification of the c-myc proto-oncogene is a co-operative event in v-abl induced fibroblast transformation. We have investigated amplification of the c-myc, p53 and c-fos nuclear proto-oncogenes in several Abelson murine leukaemia virus (A-MuLV) transformed fibroblast lines. None of these proto-oncogenes were detectably rearranged or amplified in v-abl transformed Swiss 3T3 lines. In contrast, NIH3T3 fibroblasts transformed by the v-abl gene consistently showed a 4 to 16-fold amplification of the c-myc gene. These data show that c-myc gene amplification is not an obligatory event associated with A-MuLV transformation, but may be restricted to cell lines derived from NIH3T3. c-myc gene amplification also did not correlate with a reduced latency period for tumour induction in nude mice. In addition, c-myc amplification was not selected during tumourigenesis, indicating that this event is not required for A-MuLV transformed Swiss 3T3 cells to display a full tumourigenic phenotype.
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PMID:Analysis of A-MuLV transformed fibroblast lines for amplification of the c-myc, p53 and c-fos nuclear proto-oncogenes. 254 44

Transfection of a cloned p53 gene into a p53 nonproducer Abelson murine leukemia virus-transformed cell line, L12, reconstituted p53 expression. The protein expressed in these cells was indistinguishable from that naturally expressed in p53 producer tumor cells. Conversely, p53 protein expressed in L12-derived clones that were established by transfection with a full-length p53 cDNA clone (pM8) exhibited a discrete immunological form. Immunoprecipitation of p53 with a panel of monoclonal anti-p53 antibodies showed that L12-derived clones that were transfected with the genomic p53 clone contained the same antigenic determinants as those found in the p53 protein expressed in tumor cells. These p53 proteins bound all monoclonal antibody types as well as the polyclonal anti-p53 tested. However, L12-derived clones established by transfection of the p53 cDNA clone (pM8) expressed a p53 protein that bound the RA3-2C2 and PAb200.47 anti-p53 monoclonal antibodies as well as polyclonal anti-p53 serum but totally lacked the antigenic receptor for the PAb122 and PAb421 monoclonal antibodies. The p53 proteins expressed by either genomic or cDNA p53 clones exhibited the same apparent molecular sizes and identical partial peptide maps. We suggest that transfection of the p53 gene induced expression of the entire group of the possible mRNA species, whereas cloned p53 cDNA (pM8) represented a single mRNA molecule that codes for a discrete species of p53 protein.
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PMID:Isolation of a full-length mouse cDNA clone coding for an immunologically distinct p53 molecule. 258 Feb 27

Several proto-oncogenes have been reported to be expressed in normal and malignant hematopoietic cells. Since these studies have been done almost exclusively by Northern and dot-blot analyses using mixed populations of cells, any conclusions concerning quantitative changes in gene expression are difficult to document. We have developed a rapid and sensitive RNA-in situ hybridization technique permitting detection of as few as 5 copies of mRNA per individual cell. Using this technique we have studied the expression levels of several oncogenes including MYC, SIS, FMS, p53, FOS and RAF in both normal hematopoietic cells and bone marrow (BM) cells obtained from acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) patients at presentation, at relapse and in complete remission (CR). Two of these oncogenes, MYC and SIS, are expressed at levels at least 2-5-fold higher in hematopoietic cells obtained from leukemia patients than in any normal hematopoietic cell examined, including cells obtained from regenerating bone marrow. The proportion of abnormal cells correlated well with the percentage of blast cells determined by morphological examination. In 7 out of 10 AML patients in morphological remission, a subpopulation of cells is detectable with abnormally high levels of MYC and/or SIS mRNA. These high levels of MYC expression are similar to those found in BM cells obtained from AML patients at presentation or relapse, but the percentage of cells with this abnormality is generally much lower. Continued follow-up of these patients has shown that 5 of them relapsed within 8 months. At this time, none of the 3 patients which were negative for MYC overexpression has relapsed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Detection of minimal residual disease in acute myelogenous leukemia by RNA-in situ hybridization. 265 88

p53 is a nuclear protein associated with cellular transformation and normal cellular proliferation. Some transformed cells have been found to have one or several quantitative or qualitative abnormalities of p53. We studied expression, kinetics, phosphorylation, DNA methylation and chromatin structure of p53 in resting and proliferating untransformed T-lymphocytes and in human T-cell leukemia virus type I transformed T-lymphocytes from the same individuals. p53 expression is indistinguishable in transformed compared to untransformed proliferating T-lymphocytes by: (1) p53 mRNA levels, (2) rate of synthesis and stability of p53 protein, (3) change in protein stability after exposure to an inhibitor of protein synthesis, (4) presence of phosphorylation of the p53 protein. Resting T-lymphocytes from these same individuals did not express p53. No difference in DNA methylation and chromatin structure of the p53 gene was observed in either resting or proliferating untransformed, or virally transformed T-lymphocytes. The gene was fully methylated and resistant to DNAase I over its entire coding region but was demethylated and contained DNAase I hypersensitive sites in a distinct region 5' of the site of initiation of transcription.
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PMID:Expression, methylation and chromatin structure of the p53 gene in untransformed and human T-cell leukemia virus type I-transformed human T-lymphocytes. 265 79

The full-length provirus of human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) was isolated from MT-2, a lymphoid cell line producing HTLV-I. In transfected cells, structural proteins of HTLV-I, the gag and env products, were formed and processed in the same manner as observed in MT-2 cells. The nucleotide sequence was determined for a region between the gag and pol genes of the proviral DNA clone containing an open-reading frame. The deduced amino acid sequences show that this open-reading frame encodes a putative HTLV-I protease. The protease gene (pro) of HTLV-I was investigated using a vaccinia virus expression vector. Processing of 53k gag precursor polyprotein into mature p19, p24, and p15 gag structural proteins was detectable with a recombinant plasmid harboring the entire gag- and protease-coding sequence. We demonstrated that the protease processed the gag precursor polyprotein in a trans-action. A change in the sequence Asp(64)-Thr-Gly, the catalytic core sequence among aspartyl proteases, to Gly-Thr-Gly was shown to abolish correct processing, suggesting that HTLV-I protease may belong to the aspartyl protease group. The 76k gag-pro precursor polyprotein was identified, implying that a cis-acting function of HTLV-I protease may be necessary to trigger the initial cleavage event for its own release from a precursor protein, followed by the release of p53 gag precursor protein. The p53 gag precursor protein is then processed by the trans-action of the released protease to form p19, p24, and p15.
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PMID:Identification of HTLV-I gag protease and its sequential processing of the gag gene product. 266 87


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