Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Essential thrombocythaemia (ET) is a rare clonal myeloproliferative disorder characterized by a persistent increase in platelet count. The commonly used criteria for the diagnosis, except for the level of the increase in platelet count, are usually those fixed by the Polycythemia Vera Study Group. The average age of onset is around 60 years, both sexes being affected. The symptoms frequently present at diagnosis are related to microcirculatory disturbances (palms, soles, fingers). Neurological symptoms are often observed. Thrombotic complications of the large vessels are less frequent. Haemorrhagic problems are present in about 30% of patients. Bleeding time is normal in most cases, whereas platelet aggregation abnormalities are frequently found. Nil adrenaline aggregation is the most discriminative test. The clinical course is characterized by long intervals without any symptoms; thromboembolic or haemorrhagic episodes can, however, occur, mainly in uncontrolled ET. Development of terminal acute
leukaemia
has been reported in 34 cases. The expression of the influence of the treatments, 32P or alkylating agents, is very strong. The treatment of ET has to take in consideration the difficult compromise between balancing the necessity of preventing complications and the effects of drug toxicity. The use of recombinant alpha-interferon has recently been proposed and is under investigation. The pathogenesis of thrombocytosis in ET seems to involve an expansion in the megakaryocyte progenitor cell pool. Platelet
membrane glycoprotein
abnormalities and defective glycosylation of thrombospondin have been shown. Numerous other platelet abnormalities, including decreased alpha-adrenergic receptors, loss of PGD2 receptors and increased Fc receptors, have been reported. Arachidonic metabolism seems to be abnormal and lipoxygenase is defective. Most of the platelet abnormalities seem to be the result of intrinsic defects at the level of an abnormal clone of megakaryocytes. However, causal relationships between the platelet abnormalities and bleeding or thrombosis are not yet clearly demonstrated.
...
PMID:Essential thrombocythaemia. 250 75
The aim of this study was to find out whether the
membrane glycoprotein
P-170 can be detected in human tumours with both acquired and intrinsic resistance to chemotherapeutic agents using monoclonal antibodies (265/F4 and C219) and the streptavidin-biotinylated phycoerythrin complex method. Pretreated
leukaemia
cells and untreated lung and ovarian carcinomas were analysed. Two plasmacytomas and one
leukaemia
expressed high levels of P-glycoprotein, whereas two leukaemias showed moderate, and three leukaemias no expression of this protein. The intrinsic resistance was analysed with a panel of four human epidermoid lung cancer xenografts grown in nude mice. The expression of P-glycoprotein could be correlated with the degree of resistance. In addition, one out of five ovarian carcinomas revealed a high level of P-glycoprotein.
...
PMID:Detection of the multidrug resistant phenotype in human tumours by monoclonal antibodies and the streptavidin-biotinylated phycoerythrin complex method. 256 14
A daunorubicin-resistant variant of the K562 human
leukemia
cell line (K562-R), which demonstrates cross-resistance to other anthracycline antibiotics and Vinca alkaloids, has been developed in vitro by continuous exposure to daunorubicin. Cross-resistance to anthracyclines and Vinca alkaloids is reversed when cells are exposed to drugs in the presence of verapamil, a calcium channel blocker. The K562-R cell line overexpresses a 4.5-kilobase mRNA, which is thought to code for the Mr 170,000
membrane glycoprotein
associated with multidrug resistance. Transport studies indicate reduced intracellular accumulation and retention of daunorubicin in the K562-R cells as compared to the parent cell line. These studies further suggest the presence of distinct cellular pools composed of both rapidly and slowly exchanging drug, with the rapidly exchanging pool being more pronounced in the resistant line. The development of multidrug resistance in the K562-R cell line is also associated with the overexpression of five different cell surface membrane proteins ranging in molecular weight between 50,000 and 210,000, whose function remains to be defined.
...
PMID:Characterization of a K562 multidrug-resistant cell line. 256 71
The fact that cancer cell acquires multidrug resistance to carcinostatics at cancer treatment is a very important subject clinically. The mode of multidrug-resistance is complicated, but the gene associated with multidrug resistance (MDR 1) has been isolated. It has become evident that MDR 1 gene carries
membrane glycoprotein
(P-glycoprotein) which occurs in the cell acquired drug-resistance. Assessment has been made this time regarding the occurrence of P-glycoprotein in the tumorous cells and tissues by the use of monoclonal antibody (C 219) to P-glycoprotein. Occurrence of P-glycoprotein in malignant lymphoma exhibited positivity in 9 cases out of 36 immunohistologically. 170 KD P-glycoprotein was detected in 4 cases out of 10 at Western blotting analysis of the protein isolated from the nuclear cell in the peripheral blood in the patients with
leukemia
. Further, P-glycoprotein positive cases were all progressive cases clinically and showed resistance to treatment. From these results, it has been clarified that occurrence of P-glycoprotein in haematological tumors is related to multidrug resistance.
...
PMID:[Expression of P-glycoprotein (multidrug-resistance gene product) in haematological tumors]. 257 82
Friend virus clearly provides an important model for understanding the molecular biology of cancer. Moreover, the most important aspects of the erythroleukemia can be caused by a single SFFV infection in the absence of any helper virus. The SFFV env gene encodes a
membrane glycoprotein
, gp55. This glycoprotein, when expressed on erythroblast surfaces, causes a constitutive mitogenesis. However, SFFV infections only rarely increase the cell's self-renewal capability or abrogate its commitment to differentiate. Therefore, the consequence of infection is initially a polyclonal erythroblastosis. This polyclonal proliferation usually leads to cell differentiation and to recovery unless helper virus is present to cause continuing infection of new erythroblasts. Extremely rare SFFV proviral integrations, however, result in abrogation of the cell's commitment to differentiate and in the concomitant acquisition of cell immortality. These immortalizing proviral integrations occur at only a small number of sites in the mouse genome. Therefore, the mitogenic and immortalizing stages of erythroleukemia are now known to be caused by discrete genetic events--the first involving the SFFV env gene and the second involving the rare proviral integration sites. In early investigations of Friend virus, the first stage always preceded the second stage by at least several weeks. Now it is known that this delay in onset of the second stage is caused solely by statistics. Every SFFV-infected erythroblast is mitogenically activated, yet only rarely does the SFFV proviral integration produce immortality. Both steps in leukemogenesis can be caused simultaneously in an erythroblast by a rare single SFFV proviral integration. There has been an explosion of interest in retroviral env gene-mediated pathogenesis. Such pathogenesis has been recently associated with most of the naturally transmitted retroviral diseases including AIDS. Such pathogenesis involves in different viruses immunosuppression, anemia, neuropathy, and
leukemia
(Mathes et al. 1978; Simon et al. 1984, 1987; Weiss et al. 1985; Lifson et al. 1986; Riedel et al. 1986; Sitbon et al. 1986; Sodroski et al. 1986; Mitani et al. 1987; Schmidt et al. 1987; Klase et al. 1988; Overbaugh et al. 1988a, b). The shuffling and dynamic env gene rearrangements that have been associated with murine retroviral leukemogenesis have also now been seen in FeLV-FAIDS and HIV (Fisher et al. 1988; Overbaugh et al. 1 t88b; Saag et al. 1988; Tersmette et al. 1988). Friend virus provides an important established example of such env gene pathogenesis. Although we still do not understand precisely how gp55 causes erythroblast mitosis, workers in this field have discovered important clues that may lead to answers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Molecular biology of Friend viral erythroleukemia. 268 47
The common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA/CD10) is a nonintegral
membrane glycoprotein
expressed on normal and neoplastic cells of hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic origin. We have undertaken a series of experiments to examine 1) the structural homology between
leukemia
cell and neutrophil CALLA/CD10 and 2) the putative function CALLA/CD10 subserves to human neutrophils. Biosynthetic labeling, peptide mapping, and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis indicate that neutrophils synthesize and express a CALLA/CD10 molecule that is similar, but not identical, to leukemic cell CALLA/CD10. The level of CALLA/CD10 expression is similar on the two cell populations, and neutrophil CALLA/CD10 (like its leukemic cell counterpart) undergoes antigenic modulation. Finally, we report that neutrophil cell surface-bound anti-CALLA/CD10 monoclonal antibodies inhibit the chemotactic response to both N-Formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (F-mlp) and zymosan-activated sera (ZAS), but had no inhibitory effect on random migration, degranulation, or aggregation. The anti-class I monoclonal antibody W6/32 exerted a similar effect on chemotaxis. We conclude that CALLA/CD10 has no clearly defined role in neutrophil function but may play a role in some distal event in chemotaxis.
...
PMID:Structure/function studies of the common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA/CD10) expressed on human neutrophils. 294 84
The leukemogenic
membrane glycoprotein
of Friend spleen focus-forming virus (SFFV) has an apparent Mr of 55,000 (gp55), is encoded by a recombinant env gene, and occurs on cell surfaces and in intracellular organelles. There is evidence that the amino-terminal region of gp55 forms a dualtropic-specific domain that is connected to the remainder of the glycoprotein by a proline-rich linker (C. Machida, R. Bestwick, B. Boswell, and D. Kabat, Virology 144:158-172, 1985). Using the colinear form of a cloned polycythemic strain of SFFV proviral DNA, we constructed seven in-phase env mutants by insertion of linkers and by a deletion. The mutagenized SFFVs were transfected into fibroblasts and were rescued by superinfection with a helper murine
leukemia
virus. Four of the mutants cause erythroblastosis. These include one with a 6-base-pair (bp) insert in the ecotropic-related sequence near the 3' end of the gene, two with a 12- or 18-bp insert in the region that encodes the proline-rich linker, and one with a 6-bp insert in the dualtropic-specific region. The other mutants (RI, Sm1, and Sm2) are nonpathogenic and contain lesions in dualtropic-specific region. The other mutants (RI, Sm1, and Sm2) are nonpathogenic and contain lesions in dualtropic-specific sequences that are highly conserved among strains of SFFV. A pathogenic revertant (RI-rev) was isolated from one mouse that developed erythroblastosis 3 weeks after infection with RI. RI-rev contains a second-site env mutation that affects the same domain as the primary mutation does and that increases the size of the encoded glycoprotein. All pathogenic SFFVs encode glycoproteins that are expressed on cell surfaces, whereas the nonpathogenic glycoproteins are exclusively intracellular. The pathogenic SFFVs also specifically cause a weak interference to superinfection by dualtropic MuLVs. These results are compatible with the multidomain model for the structure of gp55 and suggest that processing of gp55 to plasma membranes is required for pathogenesis. The amino-terminal region of gp55 binds to dualtropic murine
leukemia
virus receptors, and this interaction is preserved in the SFFV mutants that cause erythroblastosis.
...
PMID:The membrane glycoprotein of Friend spleen focus-forming virus: evidence that the cell surface component is required for pathogenesis and that it binds to a receptor. 303 69
Four case histories are reported: 1. A 37-year-old woman suffering from Glanzmann's thrombasthenia has been regularly seen since 1955. Characteristically (and in contrast to the first description by Glanzmann!) persistently prolonged bleeding times were noted. Clot retraction is severely diminished and the platelets fail to aggregate upon various stimuli. (Platelet agglutination upon addition of ristocetin to platelet rich plasma is normal.) The diagnosis of thrombasthenia was confirmed by demonstration of a deficiency of the
membrane glycoprotein
IIb/IIIa complex. In recent years the patient has become refractory to platelet transfusion therapy, a response shown to be due to antibodies against GPIIb/IIIa in the plasma. Spontaneous bleeding tendency has appeared to improve over the years. 2. Two patients with proliferation of B-lymphocytes are presented. a) Splenomegaly and an increase of B-lymphocytes in the peripheral blood were detected in a 45-year-old asymptomatic man. DNA analysis suggested that polyclonal proliferation of B-lymphocytes was present. Diagnostic considerations are discussed. b) In a 46-year-old male patient with subacute aleukemic
leukemia
of a pre-B-cell type diagnosed in 1981, the disease showed an unexpectedly benign course: after initial mild chemotherapy the patient has remained in a stable condition while off cytotoxic treatment for the last two years. Nevertheless, besides anemia necessitating regular transfusions, persistent agranulocytosis is present which is not explained by bone marrow infiltration. In vitro experiments suggest suppression of myelopoiesis by cellular interaction with leukemic cells or a deficiency of growth factors causing agranulocytosis. 3. An 81-year-old man showed signs and symptoms of lead intoxication which proved to be due to oral ingestion of a lead-containing ointment.
...
PMID:[Unusual features in Glanzmann thrombasthenia; proliferation of B-lymphocytes, lead poisoning]. 305 86
Immunohistochemical localization of human leukocyte common antigen (LCA), a major
membrane glycoprotein
restricted to leukocytes, was evaluated in paraffin sections of a wide variety of hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic tissues (294 specimens) with monoclonal antibodies (PD7/26 and 2B11). In nonneoplastic tissues, LCA was identified on B and T lymphocytes, with variable immunoreactivities for plasma cells and histiocytes. By light microscopy and ultrastructurally, LCA was localized predominantly to the cell membrane and was also present focally in the cytoplasm. Myeloid cells at all stages of maturation were non-reactive, as were erythroid cells, megakaryocytes, and all non-hematopoietic tissues. Monocytes and mast cells, however, revealed membrane staining for LCA. In nearly all non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of the B- and T-cell types (74 of 80; 93 per cent), the lymphoid infiltrate was immunoreactive for LCA. In specimens from patients with Hodgkin's disease (nodular sclerosis and mixed cellularity type), rare Reed-Sternberg cells stained for LCA. Neoplastic cells were consistently immunoreactive for LCA in specimens from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia of the B- or T-cell type, prolymphocyte
leukemia
, and hairy cell leukemia. However, tissues from only three of eight cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia were LCA-positive, with most non-reactive specimens exhibiting CALLA (J5) positivity. In cases of multiple myeloma, only minor populations of plasmacytic cells exhibited membrane staining for LCA. Nonhematopoietic neoplasms (102 evaluated), including small cell anaplastic carcinomas, amelanotic melanomas, alveolar rhabdomyosarcomas, Ewing's sarcoma, and germ cell tumors, were uniformly non-reactive. Human LCA represents an excellent cell marker for paraffin sections, to distinguish hematopoietic neoplasms, particularly of the lymphoid type, from poorly differentiated tumors of epithelial, mesenchymal, or neural derivation.
...
PMID:Leukocyte common antigen--a diagnostic discriminant between hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic neoplasms in paraffin sections using monoclonal antibodies: correlation with immunologic studies and ultrastructural localization. 315 3
Rauscher and Friend spleen focus-forming viruses (R- and F-SFFVs) cause similar progressive erythroleukemias dependent upon a virus-encoded
membrane glycoprotein
. Moreover, these SFFV glycoproteins are immunologically related to each other and to the recombinant-type glycoproteins encoded by the env genes of dual tropic murine
leukemia
viruses. To better understand these diseases and the viral origins, we isolated a pathogenically active molecular clone of R-SFFV proviral DNA, sequenced its 3'-terminal 2,163-base-pair (bp) region, and compared these sequences with previously determined sequences of F-SFFV. The 516-bp R-SFFV long terminal repeat is highly homologous to those of F-SFFV and Friend murine
leukemia
virus, although only the latter contains a 65-bp direct repeat in its U3 region. The env gene of R-SFFV encodes a glycoprotein with 408 amino acids that is identical in its basic domain organization to the glycoprotein of F-SFFV. Thus, the junctions between the dual tropic-related and ecotropic sequences occur at the same nucleotide, and both SFFV env genes contain identical 585-bp deletions in their ecotropic domains and single-bp insertions which cause premature terminations at the same amino acid in their ecotropic p15E domains. Consistent with their independent origins, however, the env sequences of R- and F-SFFV are distinctive in both their 5' dual tropic-related and 3' ecotropic-related domains. Furthermore, there are several consistent amino acid differences between the polycythemic F-SFFV sequences and the anemia-inducing R-SFFV sequence. The striking similarities of the independently formed F- and R-SFFV env genes imply that all of the glycoprotein domains arranged in a precise organization may be required for its leukemogenic activity
...
PMID:Molecular cloning of biologically active Rauscher spleen focus-forming virus and the sequences of its env gene and long terminal repeat. 608 93
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