Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the diagnostic investigation of 750 acute leukemias, nine cases were morphologically, cytochemically, and phenotypically undifferentiated. In seven of these cases the blasts were class II+, CD34+ and TdT+, in one were class II+, TdT+, CD7+ while in the remaining leukemia blasts expressed class II only. Cytoplasmic and membrane CD22, CD3, CD13, and Ig as well as membrane CD19, CD10, CD37, CD2, CD33, CD14, glycophorin C, and CD61 were absent. The further characterization of these rare leukemias yielded the following results. The TCR-beta, -gamma and -delta genes were in germline configuration in seven cases studied while IgH genes were rearranged on both alleles in two cases and germline in the other five. By ultrastructural analysis peroxidase activity was detected on unfixed cells in a minority of blasts from four of seven cases. In two of the peroxidase-positive cases a small proportion of blasts also reacted with an anti-
myeloperoxidase
monoclonal antibody. In one of the peroxidase-negative cases, 7% of blasts were labeled by the antibody, suggesting the presence of peroxidase in its proenzyme form. Importantly, the two cases with Ig gene rearrangements did not have cytochemically or immunologically detectable peroxidase. Three of the nine patients were treated as ALL while six received
AML
chemotherapy. In five patients complete remission was achieved while the other four died from infections during remission induction. Four patients are still in remission 7, 12, 24, and 30 months after diagnosis while one patient relapsed after 12 months. In conclusion, we have characterized the genotypic and ultrastructural features of subtype of acute leukemia in which blasts expressed immaturity markers and lacked lineage associated antigens. In contrast to previously reported "unclassifiable" cases, the leukemias were phenotypically homogeneous and showed a good response to chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Phenotypic, genotypic, cytochemical, and ultrastructural characterization of acute undifferentiated leukemia. 239 82
Cytochemical investigation of leukemic promyelocytes from 25 cases of acute promyelocytic leukemia (M3) disclosed two major cellular differentiation categories: (1) the pure neutrophilic (N) type (16 cases) with strong
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) and naphthol-ASD chloroacetate esterase (Es-chl), but lacking the monocytic enzyme NaF-sensitive alpha-naphthyl butyrate esterase (Es-b), and (2) the mixed neutrophilic/monocytoid (N/M) type (seven cases) with strong Es-b as well as strong
MPO
, all cases exhibiting Es-dual (Es-b + Es-chl) positive cells. Two more cases with unusual phenotypes were noted: one with intense lysozyme activity but without Es-b and the other with toluidine blue-methachromasia and negative
MPO
. Promyelocytes from the control group, consisting of nine cases of t(8;21) M2
AML
and ten cases with normal bone marrow, lacked such cytochemical heterogeneity. HL-60, an M3 cell line that can be induced to differentiate toward monocytic lineage in vitro, was almost negative for Es-b in the uninduced condition. Cytogenetically, eight cases of N type and five of N/M type had the t(15;17) abnormality. Thus at least two differentiation patterns were observed in M3 leukemia with fidelity (N type) and infidelity (N/M type) for normal granulocytic differentiation. In this series, there was no statistically significant difference in clinical features (remission rate and survival) between the two types. Our study suggests that the development of M3 leukemia is not exclusively restricted to the neutrophilic pathway, but more heterogeneously related to myelomonocytic differentiation.
...
PMID:Cytochemistry of acute promyelocytic leukemia (M3): leukemic promyelocytes exhibit heterogeneous patterns in cellular differentiation. 241 66
In the chronic phase of CGL the proportion of granulocytes in S + G2 was lower (18.7 +/- 1.3% in marrow and 16.7 +/- 2.4% in blood) than in normal bone marrow (42.4 +/- 2.9%) as studied by Feulgen-DNA cytophotometry. During the blast crisis the percentage of S + G2 blasts was 39.3 +/- 8.4 in marrow and 38.7 +/- 7.8 in blood which was much higher than in
acute myeloblastic leukemia
patients (10.8 +/- 1.4 and 5.1 +/- 1.0). Thymidine labelling index values were lower than the percentage of cytophotometrically detected S-phase cells: up to 28% of cells with Feulgen-DNA content corresponding to S-phase did not incorporate 3H-thymidine. The rate of DNA synthesis remained constant during the S-phase but 3H-thymidine uptake increases towards the end of the S-phase. Morphometric parameters and quantitative cytochemical (PAS, Sudan,
myeloperoxidase
activity) characteristics of polymorphonuclear neutrophils were altered during the chronic phase of the disease but remained in the normal range during the blast crisis. Mature neutrophils in the blast crisis are assumed to originate from normal granulocyte progenitors.
...
PMID:Cytophotometry of granulocytes in chronic granulocytic leukemia patients. Part I. Cell cycle distribution, S-phase transition and quantitative cytochemistry. 244 96
In February 1986, a 68-year-old woman was diagnosed as having
acute myeloblastic leukemia
(FAB-M1). At the time of diagnosis, 86.0% of the bone marrow cells were myeloblastoid, and 15% of these myeloblastoid cells were positive to
myeloperoxidase
. Surface marker analysis by flow cytometry disclosed granulocyte-associated antigen (MY7) and also lymphocyte-associated antigen (CALLA) on the leukemic cells. Chromosomal banding studies of bone marrow cells revealed trisomy 11 in 6 of 19 metaphases examined and normal karyotype in the others. Complete remission was attained after intensive combination chemotherapy, and has remained for 38 months. Only 19 patients with trisomy 11-associated
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
(
ANLL
) including the present case have been reported. Morphologic analyses have revealed that the frequency of FAB-M1 is high. However, except for the present case, surface marker findings were apparent in only one M5a patient, in whom monocyte-macrophage-associated antigen was detected. Accordingly, careful surface marker studies will be needed to clarify the frequency of acute mixed lineage leukemia in such patients.
...
PMID:[Trisomy of chromosome 11 in a case of common ALL antigen-positive acute myeloblastic leukemia (FAB-M1)]. 253 25
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
Acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (FABM7) is an unusual but well recognized form of
acute myelogenous leukemia
in which the bone marrow blast cells are phenotypically recognized by the demonstration of cytoplasmic platelet peroxidase or surface staining for the IIb/IIIa platelet-specific glycoprotein. Herein, the authors report a case of acute megakaryoblastic leukemia that satisfies the accepted French-American-British criteria and in which the blast cells also exhibit evidence of myeloid differentiation, including surface MY7 (CD13) by flow cytometry and immunocytochemical positivity for
myeloperoxidase
. These findings suggest that megakaryoblasts may be closely related to myelomonoblasts, that they have the potential to partially differentiate along multiple phenotypic lines, and that aberrant phenotypes can occur that do not correspond to known stages of normal maturation. The authors illustrate the difficulty in classification of these aberrant phenotypes by standard cytochemical and morphologic criteria.
...
PMID:Myeloperoxidase-positive acute megakaryoblastic leukemia. 254 7
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.
...
PMID:Expression of the myeloperoxidase gene in acute and chronic myeloid leukemias: relationship to the expression of cell cycle-related genes. 254
Acute leukemia was diagnosed in 62 adults and children over a recent 13-month period. Using light microscopy, cytochemical profiles, surface markers, and cytogenetics, 25 cases were classified as
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) and 32 as acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The remaining 5 cases of de novo acute leukemia were unclassifiable. The routine cytochemical battery used on these 62 cases included:
myeloperoxidase
, sudan black B, nonspecific esterase, and periodic acid-Schiff (PAS). Flow markers utilized were: T3, T4, T5, T8, T10, T11, B1, B4, kappa, lambda, Ia, CALLA, Mo1, Mo2, My4, My7, My8, and My9. TdT was performed by immunoperoxidase and ELISA methods. The five unclassified cases were cytochemically negative and expressed no B- or T-cell-specific antigens, or TdT positivity. The morphologic differential diagnosis was between FAB L-2 and M-1. Karyotypic abnormalities involving chromosomes 3 and 7 were suggestive of myeloid origin in 2 of 4 patients studied. Flow cytometry demonstrated My7 on greater than 50% of blasts from two cases. Myeloperoxidase ultracytochemistry showed reaction product in small primary granules of blasts from all 5 cases. Positive cells contained only 1-2 granules/cell profile. The number of positive cells per case was in the range 10-20%. We conclude from this study that ultracytochemistry is very useful in providing definitive diagnosis and accurate subclassification of some
AML
FAB M-1 cases, particularly when light microscopic cytochemistry, cytogenetics, and flow cytometric markers are noncontributory. We propose to designate these acute "unclassified" leukemias as
AML
FAB M-1 "microgranular" type.
...
PMID:Acute myeloid leukemia, FAB M-1 microgranular variant: a multiparameter study. 254 66
We reported a 68-year-old woman with
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
, in whom the leukemia transformed from poorly differentiated
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
)-negative type into myelomonocytic type during the observation without chemotherapy. Hematological findings on admission revealed a leukocyte count of 3,500/microliters with 48% blasts and a platelet count of 9.2 x 10(4)/microliters. Bone marrow aspiration showed 68.2% infiltration of blasts negative for
MPO
. Sudan black B and esterase stains. By electron microscopy
MPO
was detected in the endoplasmic reticulum and nucleoenvelope of the blasts. Large vacuole-like granules were
MPO
-negative. She was observed without administration of any antileukemic agent or an immunopotentiator. The leukocyte count rose gradually, in association with increases in the relative and absolute counts of mature neutrophils and monocytic cells, and the platelet count. Twenty-six months after the initial diagnosis, a blood examination showed a leukocyte count of 74,300/microliters with 20.5% mature neutrophils and 15.5% monocytic and a platelet count of 31.4 x 10(4)/microliters. Cytological, cytochemical, ultrastructural and immunological studies of the bone marrow cells showed features compatible with acute myelomonocytic leukemia (FAB M4). This case is unusual in respect that poorly differentiated
ANLL
transformed spontaneously into moderately differentiated
ANLL
.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous differentiation from myeloperoxidase-negative acute nonlymphocytic leukemia to acute myelomonocytic leukemia]. 255 92
Auer rods are cytoplasmic inclusions found only in the leukaemic cells of some cases of
acute myeloid leukaemia
(
AML
). The ultrastructure of Auer rods is different in different sub-types of the disease and it is suggested here that this may be a consequence of the Auer rods consisting of different crystalline forms of the enzyme
myeloperoxidase
. There is statistical evidence to indicate that patients with Auer rods have a more favourable prognosis than those without. It is proposed that an investigation of the factors that determine the form, if any, of the crystallisation of
myeloperoxidase
will lead to a better understanding of the molecular events underlying the different types of
AML
. In the long term this may in turn lead to a therapeutic advance.
...
PMID:Auer rods and myeloperoxidase: an approach for investigating changes at the molecular level in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). 255 30
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>