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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The glutathione S-transferases are a group of enzymes involved in the detoxification of a wide range of xenobiotics. Elevation of the level of activity of glutathione S-transferases within the cytosol has been associated with the development of resistance to a number of cytotoxic drugs, including some commonly used in the treatment of leukaemia. In this paper we describe the purification and characterization of an anionic (p class) form of the enzyme from the peripheral blood of patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
, chronic myeloid leukaemia, and acute lymphocytic leukaemia and the spleen of a patient with
chronic lymphocytic leukaemia
. We present evidence that the form of enzyme purified closely resembles pi class glutathione S-transferase purified from human placenta. Immunoblotting performed on cytosol from the leukaemic cells from a range of cases of leukaemia at presentation, or on treatment, demonstrated that this form of glutathione S-transferase was the predominant isoenzyme expressed in all cases studied. However, in the limited number of cases studied there was no correlation between the level of expression and response to chemotherapy, suggesting that increased expression of pi class GST is not the sole cause of resistance to bifunctional alkylating agent in human leukaemias.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a pi class glutathione S-transferase from human leukaemic cells. 226 12
Expression of three clones (6-1E, 7-3G and 9-5C) selected from a
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
cDNA library was studied by nucleic acid hybridization in human promyelocytic leukemia cells (HL-60) treated with chemical inducers of cell differentiation and in primary cells derived from 27 patients with leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome. The differentiation of HL-60 cells into macrophage-like cells upon induction by 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) was accompanied by rapid induction of the expression of 6-1E and 7-3G genes. The levels of expression of the 9-5C gene were not altered during macrophage-monocytic or granulocytic differentiation of HL-60 cells. The expression of the 6-1E and/or 7-3G gene was induced by TPA in four of 6 samples derived from patients who achieved complete remission, but not in any of the
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
samples from patients who failed to achieve complete remission. These findings suggest that expression of the 6-1E and 7-3G genes is related to macrophage-monocytic differentiation and that alterations of these gene expressions in fresh leukemia cells after one hour of TPA treatment are of prognostic significance in predicting the response to therapy.
...
PMID:Expression of selected genes in differentiated HL-60 cells and primary cells from human leukemias. 233 84
We have examined the role of CMP-NeuAc:Gal beta 1-3GalNAc-R alpha(2-3)-sialyltransferase in fresh leukemia cells and leukemia-derived cell lines. Enzyme activity in normal granulocytes using Gal beta 1-3GalNAc alpha-o-nitrophenyl as substrate was 1.5 +/- 0.7 nmol/mg/h whereas activity in morphologically mature granulocytes from 6 patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) was 4.2 +/- 1.6 nmol/mg/h (P less than 0.05). Myeloblasts from 5 patients with CML in blast crisis showed enzyme activity levels of 6.5 +/- 2.5 nmol/mg/h. From 2 patients with CML, both blasts and granulocytes were obtained, with higher enzyme activity in the patients' blasts (7.1 nmol/mg/h) than in their granulocytes (4.9 nmol/mg/h) in both cases, suggesting that the increase in enzyme activity is related to the differentiation or proliferation status of the CML cells. However, similarly high enzyme levels were also seen in myeloblasts from
acute myeloblastic leukemia
patients (5.6 +/- 1.4 nmol/mg/h) and in some
acute myeloblastic leukemia
-derived cell lines (KG1a and HL60), suggesting that increased levels of this enzyme are not directly correlated with the presence of the Ph1 chromosome. This alpha(2-3)-sialyltransferase activity can also be detected in normal peripheral blood lymphocytes and exhibits increased activity in
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
cells and acute lymphoblastic leukemia. These data suggest that the level of enzyme activity may vary with growth rate and maturation status in myeloid and lymphoid hemopoietic cells. Finally, we have identified a glycoprotein in
acute myeloblastic leukemia
cells that serves as a substrate for the alpha(2-3)-sialyltransferase. The desialylated form of the glycoprotein was resialylated in vitro by the purified placental form of this alpha(2-3)-sialyltransferase and exhibits a molecular weight of about 150,000.
...
PMID:Human leukemic myeloblasts and myeloblastoid cells contain the enzyme cytidine 5'-monophosphate-N-acetylneuraminic acid:Gal beta 1-3GalNAc alpha (2-3)-sialyltransferase. 237 65
The complications associated with the use of Ommaya reservoirs in 106 patients with meningeal involvement due to malignant disease are reviewed. Twenty-seven patients had acute lymphoblastic leukemia, 12
acute myelogenous leukemia
, 3
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
, 34 lymphoma, 29 carcinoma, and 1 chronic myelocytic leukemia. There were 11 technical complications, including 1 death due to misplacement of the catheter, 2 mild intraventricular hemorrhages, and 5 malfunctioning reservoirs; 3 required craniotomies (1 for subdural hematoma and 2 for subdural hygroma); 13 cases of bacterial meningitis occurred in 10 patients. One patient died of Staphylococcus aureus meningitis. The organisms causing the other infections were mainly coagulase-negative staphylococci (8 cases) or Propionibacterium acnes (2 cases). The projected infection rate for all patients (by Kaplan-Meier analysis) during the first year following insertion of a reservoir was 15%. Successful use of Ommaya reservoirs requires expert surgical implantation and meticulous care during accessing to minimize complications.
...
PMID:Complications associated with Ommaya reservoirs in patients with cancer. The Princess Margaret Hospital experience and a review of the literature. 240 79
Cellular or proto-oncogenes are normal cellular genes important in normal cell growth and development. In some instances abnormal expression of these genes is associated with altered cell growth or with malignant transformation. Abnormalities of cellular oncogenes are common in human leukemias. These arise by multiple mechanisms such as mutation, translocation, amplification, and others. Sometimes more than one abnormality is present within a single oncogene. In other instances, a leukemia cell may contain abnormalities of several different oncogenes. Some oncogene abnormalities are relatively specific for certain leukemias and occur in almost all cases; examples include ABL in chronic myelogenous leukemia or MYC in Burkitt leukemia/lymphoma. Other abnormalities are also relatively specific but occur in only some cases such as NRAS in
acute myelogenous leukemia
or BCL2 in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In other leukemias, such as most cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia and
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
, oncogene abnormalities are uncommon. The precise role of oncogenes in the pathogenesis of human leukemia is unknown. Retrovirus transduced versions of some of the oncogenes modified in human leukemias cause leukemia in animals. Other oncogenes, modified or unmodified, transform animal and human hematopoietic cells in vitro. Some oncogene products are hematopoietic growth factors or growth factor receptors while others regulate cell proliferation or differentiation by diverse mechanisms. Disruption of the balance between these processes seems the most likely mechanism of oncogene related leukemogenesis. If the role of oncogenes in human leukemias can be defined, innovative diagnostic and therapeutic strategies may be forthcoming.
...
PMID:Oncogenes and leukemia. 240 17
A recombinant plasmid library representing the more abundant polyadenylated RNA of a relapsed acute myelomonocytic leukaemic (FAB class M4) has been constructed. One recombinant, designated pAM6, contains a DNA sequence complementary to an RNA of about 1100 nucleotides in length. The relative concentrations of pAM6 RNA in the RNAs from cloned human haematopoietic cell lines and from fractionated leukaemic leukocytes and normal bone marrow cells, measured by an RNA dot hybridization method, indicated that pAM6 RNA occurs in myeloid cells, probably those of the monocyte lineage at the earlier stages in differentiation. Similar assays showed that pAM6 RNA could not be detected in the peripheral blood leukocytes of normal individuals, or of ALL and
CLL
patients, but that the relative abundance of pAM6 RNA varied widely in leukocytes from CGL chronic phase, CGL acute phase, and
ANLL
. No correlation between pAM6 RNA occurrence and FAB classification of
ANLL
could be made; thus it would appear that the relative abundance of pAM6 RNA in
ANLL
leukocytes can be used to subdivide the ANLLs in a novel manner. It is suggested that this criterion, in conjunction with existing diagnostic markers, may provide a subclassification of the ANLLs that could be of some prognostic and therapeutic value.
...
PMID:Subdivision of the acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemias by measurement of the relative abundance of a specific RNA sequence. 241 18
Monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) were developed against the cCLLa, a 69-kilodalton leukemia-associated antigen expressed on malignant cells of B-type
chronic lymphatic leukemia
(B-CLL) and its variants: prolymphocytic (PLL) and hairy cell leukemias (HCL). Two hybridomas yielded approximately 2 and approximately 7.5 mg/mL of IgG2a kappa and IgM kappa, respectively. Monoclonal surface immunoglobulin-bearing cells of all B-
CLL
patients studied (n = 30) reacted with the MoAbs (r greater than .99) regardless of stage or lymphocyte count. This suggests that the malignant clone in
CLL
can be identified and its size monitored by using our MoAbs. In contrast, normal B lymphocytes, a large panel of normal, reactive and neoplastic cells, and malignant cell lines failed to react with either MoAb as judged by indirect immunofluorescence and by flow cytometry. Only two patients (one with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, the other with
acute myeloblastic leukemia
) exhibited a small cell subset reactive with the MoAbs. cCLLa specificity was suggested by selective target cell reactivity and competitive inhibition-absorption and confirmed by immunoprecipitation. MoAbs IgG2a kappa and IgM kappa appeared to share antigenic determinants and were moderate and avid complement binders inducing 100% and 40% target cell lysis, respectively. cCLLa density on malignant
CLL
and HCL cells was estimated by equilibrium binding studies using the IgG2a kappa MoAb at 1.7 and 9 X 10(6)/cell, respectively. The restricted expression of the cCLLa and the specificity and cytolytic activity of the anti-cCLLa MoAbs support these antibodies as probes for the classification of lymphoproliferative diseases and for the specific diagnosis and treatment of B-
CLL
and its variants.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies against the chronic lymphatic leukemia antigen cCLLa: characterization and reactivity. 244 May 1
A 67-year-old man with the coexistence of
CLL
and PV converted after 4 years to
AML
is described. This rare simultaneous occurrence of both chronic lymphoid and myeloid proliferations as well as nonlymphoblastic leukaemia developing in a patient with
CLL
is discussed in the light of literature data.
...
PMID:The coexistence of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and polycythaemia vera terminating in acute myeloid leukaemia. 246 45
We report on the characterization of four monoclonal antibodies which were prepared against membrane markers of human myeloid lineage. Fusion, isolation of hybridoma cells and their cloning and testing of the monoclonal antibodies by indirect immunofluorescence and FACS 440 analysis were performed by means of standard procedures. The results indicate that the monoclonal antibodies have a specificity against membrane markers of human myeloid lineage (exactly promyelo-granulocytes). These monoclonal antibodies do not react with human T and B lymphocytes, monocytes, erythrocytes and thrombocytes of peripheral blood. In normal bone marrow reactivity to matured myeloid cells was found to occur in promyelocytes and expressed on all granulocytes. These monoclonal antibodies also react with cells of myeloid cell lines and with other precursor cell lines represented by NALM-1, NALM-16, HEL, K-562, REH no reactivity was detected. The produced antibodies react with some leukaemic cells from patients with more mature myeloid cells (
AML
with promyelocytes, myelocytes and CML) they do not react with pathological cells from patients with
CLL
,
AML
(with myeloblasts), ALL, hairy cell leukaemia, erythroleukaemia and several types lymphoma. All antibodies have a IgM class and express granulocytotoxic and granuloagglutination activity. Using flow cytometry comparative analysis with other monoclonal antibodies was performed to detect the membrane structure (X-haptene) included in standard International classification as CD 15 group.
...
PMID:Human leukocyte markers defined by monoclonal antibodies. I. Expression of X-hapten structure on cells of myeloid lineage. 246 63
In the present study plasma fibronectin levels were determined in patients with hematopoietic malignancy, particularly leukemias, in an effort to clarify their clinical implications. Among leukemia patients, those with
AML
, ALL, ATL or
CLL
had various plasma fibronectin levels that were higher in some cases, while lower in others, as compared to normal control values. An elevation of the fibronectin level was noted often in APL, while lower fibronectin values were observed in many instances of CML. In these types of leukemia, acute exacerbation as well as supervention of infection tended to be associated with lower than normal levels of fibronectin. An especially marked depression of fibronectin occurred, when leukemia was complicated by sepsis or DIC, in which a good parallel was noted between the progress of disease and the fibronectin level. In lymphoproliferative diseases, the fibronectin value varied widely, but low fibronectin levels were frequently associated with intercurrent infection or an extreme deterioration of the general physical conditions.
...
PMID:Variation of plasma fibronectin levels in leukemia patients. 248 45
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