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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pretreatment peripheral and/or bone marrow blasts from 14 patients with acute unclassifiable
leukemia
(AUL) expressing myeloid related cell-
surface antigen
(CDII) or megakaryocyte-platelet related cell-
surface antigen
(OKM6), were isolated for further analysis in this study. Among 11 cases of CD11+AUL, despite a lack of myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, one patient's blasts possessed Auer rod in a basophilic cytoplasm and another one's blasts expressed MPO maintaining the same surface phenotype after 20 months of his clinical course. The blast from 2 cases possessed both myelomonocytic and monocyte-specific antigens on the cell-surface, whereas the remaining nine cases completely lacked monocyte-specific antigen which is detectable by monoclonal antibodies, Mo2, My4 and Leu M3 (CD14). In addition, we revealed the presence of MPO protein in the cytoplasm of 3 cases of AUL patients by cytoplasmic immunofluorescence test utilizing monoclonal antibody (MA1). Following these results, the former was diagnosed as acute myelomonocytic
leukemia
(AMMoL) and the latter as acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) by immunophenotypic analysis using flow cytometry (FACS IV) and cytoplasmic immunofluorescence test. We have also described three cases of acute megakaryocytic leukemia which were demonstrated by the presence of megakaryocyte-platelet-related cell-surface antigens detected by utilizing flow cytometry and monoclonal antibodies in addition to both the PPO activity which was shown by ultrastructural cytochemistry, and the emergence of differentiation antigens while culturing these leukemic cells. The blast of 1 case possessed both platelet GPIb and GPIIb/IIIa cell-surface antigens detected by 5F1 (CD36), AN51 (CDw42), and J15, P2 and HPL2 (CDw41), respectively, whereas the remaining two cases almont lacked the GPIb cell-
surface antigen
. Hence, the former was diagnosed as immature (pro) megakaryocytic leukemia and the latter as acute megakaryoblastic
leukemia
from the viewpoint of immunophenotypic analysis as will be discussed in this article. These leukemic blasts did not express both T-cell lineage antigens which are detectable by monoclonal antibodies, T6 (CD1), T11 (CD2), T3 (CD3), T4 (CD4), T1 (CD5), Tp40, Leu9 (CD7), T8 (CD8), and B-cell lineage antigens which are detectable by monoclonal antibodies, B4 (CD19), B1 (CD20), B2 (CD21) and J5 (CD10).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Flow cytometric analysis of myeloperoxidase negative acute unclassifiable leukemias by monoclonal antibodies. Acute myelogenous and acute megakaryocytic leukemia]. 254 Dec 76
Using a somatic cell hybridization technique, four murine monoclonal antibodies (three immunoglobulin M and one immunoglobulin G3) were produced against a human neuroblastoma cell surface glycolipid antigen. They reacted strongly with all human neuroblastoma tumor-containing specimens and six of eight human neuroblastoma cell lines. More than 98% of each neuroblastoma cell population possessed this
surface antigen
, and in the presence of complement, 100% of them were killed. While melanoma and osteogenic sarcoma carried this antigen,
leukemia
and most Ewing's and Wilms' tumors did not. There was no cross-reaction with 30 normal or remission bone marrow samples and none with normal human tissues other than neurons in vitro. This antigen was neuraminidase sensitive, separable on thin-layer chromatogram, and did not modulate after combining with the monoclonal antibodies. These antibodies could detect less than 0.1% tumor cells deliberately seeded in the bone marrow samples. Because of their unique properties, these monoclonal antibodies may have diagnostic and therapeutic potentials.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to a glycolipid antigen on human neuroblastoma cells. 258 Jun 25
Deletion analysis offers a powerful alternative to linkage and karyotypic approaches for human chromosome mapping. A panel of deletion hybrids has been derived by mutagenizing J1, a hamster cell line that stably retains chromosome 11 as its only human DNA, and selecting for loss of MIC1, a
surface antigen
encoded by a gene in band 11p13. A unique, self-consistent map was constructed by analyzing the pattern of marker segregation in 22 derivative cells lines; these carry overlapping deletions of 11p13, but selectively retain a segment near the 11p telomere. The map orders 35 breakpoints and 36 genetic markers, including 3 antigens, 2 isozymes, 12 cloned genes, and 19 anonymous DNA probes. The deletions span the entire short arm, dividing it into more than 20 segments and define a set of reagents that can be used to rapidly locate any newly identified marker on 11p, with greatest resolution in the region surrounding MIC1. The approach we demonstrate can be applied to map any mammalian chromosome. To test the gene order, we examined somatic cell hybrids from five patients, whose reciprocal translocations bisect band 11p13; these include two translocations associated with familial aniridia and two with acute T-cell
leukemia
. In each patient, the markers segregate in telomeric and centromeric groups as predicted by the deletion map. These data locate the aniridia gene (AN2) and a recurrent T-cell
leukemia
breakpoint (TCL2) in the marker sequence, on opposite sides of MIC1. To provide additional support, we have characterized the dosage of DNA markers in a patient with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome and an 11p15-11pter duplication. Our findings suggest the following gene order: TEL - (HRAS1, MER2, CTSD, TH/INS/IGF2, H19, D11S32) - (RRM1, D11S1, D11S25, D11S26) - D11S12 - (HBBC, D11S30) - D11S20 - (PTH, CALC) - (LDHA, SAA, TRPH, D11S18, D11S21) - D11S31 - D11S17 - HBVS1 - (FSHB, D11S16) - AN2 - MIC1 - TCL2 - delta J - CAT - MIC4 - D11S9 - D11S14 - ACP2 - (D11S33, 14L) - CEN. We have used the deletion map to show the distribution on 11p of two centromeric repetitive elements and the low-order interspersed repeat A36Fc. Finally, we provide evidence for an allelic segregation event in the hamster genome that underlies the stability of chromosome 11 in J1. The deletion map provides a basis to position hereditary disease loci on 11p, to distinguish the pattern of recessive mutations in different forms of cancer and, since many of these genes have been mapped in other mammalian species, to study the evolution of a conserved syntenic group.
...
PMID:A fine-structure deletion map of human chromosome 11p: analysis of J1 series hybrids. 259 51
Leukocyte-function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1) expression on two widespread tumor cell lines: K562 (an erythroleukemia) and MOLT-4 (a T
leukemia
), was investigated using two monoclonal antibodies specific for the alpha chain of this
surface antigen
, and flow cytometry analysis. When K562 cells are in the exponential phase of growth, they display very low levels of LFA-1. By contrast, cells from the plateau phase exhibit a strong labelling, which disappears rapidly when they are allowed to resume division by changing the culture medium. Using the same experimental conditions, we failed to detect any LFA-1 expression on MOLT-4 cells. However, after stimulation of these cells by phorbol myristate acetate, we observed a significant labelling, which occurred within 2 days of treatment. The LFA-1 expression disappears progressively after removal of the phorbol ester. From these results it may be concluded that (a) LFA-1 expression can vary considerably according to the culture conditions, (b) the expression of this antigen on the surface of non-expressing variants can be induced by phorbol ester, and (c) in both cases, the change in expression can be reversed completely by replacing the culture medium or by removing phorbol myristate acetate from it.
...
PMID:In vitro modulation of leucocyte-function-associated antigen-1 expression on two leukemic cell lines. 265 Aug 66
Leukemic blasts from 40 consecutively admitted adults with untreated acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were examined for myeloid
surface antigen
expression. Of these, 14 (35%) were reactive with one or more myeloid monoclonal antibodies. Each example of myeloid
surface antigen
-positive (My+ ALL) met the standard morphologic and cytochemical criteria for ALL. In addition, none of the 13 samples studied for ultrastructural evidence of myeloperoxidase met the criteria for acute myelocytic leukemia (AML). All patient samples reacted with lymphoid monoclonal antibodies: CD10+ (8 patients), CD19+ CD10- (2 patients), T cell+ (2 patients), and T cell+ CD10+ (2 patients). Coexpression of myeloid and lymphoid determinants was established by two-color immunofluorescence studies using flow cytometry in five of five samples analyzed. Cytogenetic abnormalities that have been associated with myeloid and mixed leukemias were common, including t(9;22), 7q-, abnormalities of 11q with or without a translocation, 20q-, and -5. Blasts from seven patients were studied at the molecular level. Immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements were detected in five of five samples with B cell+ T cell- phenotypes. One sample that was T cell+ CD10+ was germline for the immunoglobulin heavy chain and the T cell receptor gamma- and beta-chain genes. The other patient with T cell+ CD10+ blasts relapsed with AML following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. The
leukemia
cells at the time of diagnosis and the cells at relapse demonstrated similar cytogenetics and the same immunoglobulin gene rearrangement, suggesting a clonal relationship. As a group, the My+ ALL patients had a significantly decreased complete remission rate when compared to My- ALL patients. Further studies at the molecular level will be required to determine the significance of karyotype abnormalities in My+ ALL.
Leukemia
1989 Nov
PMID:Myeloid surface antigen-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (My+ ALL): immunophenotypic, ultrastructural, cytogenetic, and molecular characteristics. 281 78
A 74 year old woman with rheumatoid arthritis, hepatosplenomegaly, neutropenia, and peripheral blood lymphocytosis is described. The lymphocytes had a large granular morphology and expressed a CD3+ CD8+ Leu7+
surface antigen
phenotype. They did not have natural killer cell function. Southern analysis of the lymphocyte DNA using two restriction enzymes showed a rearranged pattern for the T cell receptor beta chain gene, indicating a monoclonal lymphoproliferation. Large granular lymphocytosis is a rare and heterogeneous phenomenon, which has become more clearly characterised through the application of molecular biology techniques. Most cases appear to be forms of T cell
leukaemia
with a chronic benign course. The association between rheumatoid arthritis and large granular lymphocytosis is emphasised.
...
PMID:Large granular lymphocytosis associated with rheumatoid arthritis. 284 61
CD2 (the sheep erythrocyte receptor) is a
surface antigen
of human T lymphocytes. A role for CD2 in T cell function has been implicated from the observation that antibodies against CD2 are capable of transmitting both positive and negative signals for cell growth. Biochemically, the molecule has been identified as a broad band on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels of about 50-58 kDa. This communication demonstrates that CD2 contains N-linked carbohydrate as endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase F digestion reduced its apparent mol. mass to a compact band of 40 kDa. CD2 was purified from the T
leukemia
cell line J6 by immunoaffinity chromatography and preparative SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Four bands of 52, 54, 56 and 58 kDa could be distinguished in the immunoaffinity-purified protein which formed a broad zone on SDS-PAGE extending from about 45 to 58 kDa. Preparative SDS-PAGE yielded a product suitable for determining the N-terminal amino acid sequence. Assignments were made for the first 26 (excluding the 23rd) residues and the sequence identified a novel polypeptide.
...
PMID:Purification and N-terminal amino acid sequence of the human T lymphocyte CD2 (T11) surface antigen. 288 Jul 25
In somatic cell hybrids between the pseudodiploid Thy-1- Abelson-
leukemia
-virus-induced pre-B cell lymphoma RAW 253.1 and the Thy-1+ T-cell lymphoma, AKR1 (Thy-1+), all cells express the Thy-1 allele of the T-cell parent but most hybrid cells do not express the Thy-1 allele of the pre-B cell lymphoma parent. The Thy-1 allele of the pre-B cell parent, however, is spontaneously activated in a minor proportion of hybrid cells. By sorting for cells expressing the Thy-1 allele of the pre-B cell parent, derivative clones in which 100% of cells express both parental Thy-1 alleles can be isolated. Revertants with a phenotype identical with that of the original hybrid cell line can be isolated from these derivatives by sorting for nonexpression of the Thy-1 allele of the pre-B cell parent. These first-generation revertant cell lines have lost one copy of the Thy-1 gene derived from the pre-B cell lymphoma parent. By a further cycle of sorting, derivatives in which 100% of cells express both parental Thy-1 alleles can again be obtained. Second-generation revertants isolated by sorting these Thy-1+ hybrid cells for nonexpression of the Thy-1 allele of the pre-B cell parent no longer contain a normal copy of the pre-B cell Thy-1 allele and this
surface antigen
is no longer expressed by any cells in the population. These results are consistent with a mechanism that sequentially activates each copy of the Thy-1 gene derived from the pre-B cell lymphoma parent. Hybrids between the class D Thy-1- mutant, AKR1 (Thy-1- d), in which the 5' region of the Thy-1 structural gene has been deleted, and RAW 253.1 cannot be activated to express either Thy-1 allele. This result indicates that a sequence upstream of exon 2 of the active Thy-1 allele is critical for the initial activation event.
...
PMID:Sequential activation and loss of the pre-B cell Thy-1 gene in T-cell X pre-B cell somatic hybrids. 289 32
A total of 2,283 serum samples were collected from healthy subjects in three islands of the Yaeyama district of Okinawa, Japan. These sera were tested for the presence of hepatitis B
surface antigen
(HBsAg), for antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc), and for antibody to adult T-cell
leukemia
-associated antigen (anti-ATLA). Correlation between hepatitis B virus infection and adult T-cell
leukemia
virus (ATLV) infection was determined by using the prevalence rates for three virus markers. Overall prevalence of HBsAg, anti-HBc and anti-ATLA was 6.5%, 57.4%, and 17.9%, respectively. Age-specific prevalence of anti-HBc and anti-ATLA increased with age, but that of HBsAg did not. Sex-specific prevalence of HBsAg was significantly higher in males than in females, but that of anti-ATLA was significantly higher in females than in males. Statistical analysis revealed that prevalence of anti-ATLA was significantly higher in HBsAg-positive persons and HBsAg-negative/anti-HBc-positive persons than in those negative for HBsAg and anti-HBc. These data suggest that hepatitis B virus-infected persons have a significantly higher chance of adult T-cell
leukemia
virus infection than those without hepatitis B virus infection in the area studied.
...
PMID:Seroepidemiologic study of adult T-cell leukemia virus (ATLV) and hepatitis B virus infection in Okinawa, Japan. 290 14
We used 2-parameter flow cytometry (FCM) to investigate the relationship between the cell cycle phases and 3 proteins whose expression is known to increase in proliferating cells: the
surface antigen
transferrin receptor (Trf-r), the "cyclin" (a proliferating cell nuclear antigen, PCNA), and the nuclear antigen recognized by the monoclonal antibody (MoAb) Ki-67. FITC-labeled antibodies against Trf-r, PCNA, and the Ki-67-reactive antigen, as well as propidium iodide-DNA distribution, were simultaneously measured on human
leukemia
HL-60 and K562, and breast carcinoma MCF-7 cell lines and on fresh human leukemic and glioblastoma cells. The 70% ethanol fixation for Trf-r and PCNA and the 95% acetone fixation for Ki-67 plus permeabilization (with 0.1% and 1% Triton X100, respectively, for the surface and the nuclear antigens) produced cell suspensions with negligible cell clumping, high-quality DNA profiles, and bright specific immunofluorescent staining. The investigated proteins have different relationships with the proliferative state of the cell. Trf-r is expressed mainly at the transition from G0/G1 to S-phase. PCNA expression is prominent in late G1 and through S-phase and decreases in G2-M. The Ki-67-reactive antigen is widely distributed in G1, S, and G2-M phases. Knowledge regarding the relationships between proliferation-associated antigens and cell cycle phase in normal and neoplastic cells could improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying growth regulation and neoplastic transformation. Bivariate FCM is an easy method for obtaining these data from large numbers of cells.
...
PMID:Cell cycle-related proteins: a flow cytofluorometric study in human tumors. 290 62
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