Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (acute myeloid leukemia)
35,200 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We established a factor-independent acute myeloid leukemia cell line, designated Ei501. The line has been growing in RPMI 1640 media for 18 months and can be maintained without addition of growth factors. Ei501 is positive for myeloperoxidase and negative for esterase and PAS. Cytogenetic analysis revealed the FAB M3 associated t(15;17) translocation and a translocation of the chromosomes 7 and 8: 46 XX, -7, +t(7;8)(q32;q13), t(15;17)(q22;q12). This karyotype was confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Ei501 cells express AML-associated surface markers such as CD13, CD33 and CD38. Although 42% of the patient's blast cells were CD34-positive, the line lacks surface expression of CD34. Furthermore the line has a number of characteristics which are detectable in blasts from AML patients, such as surface adhesion molecules, cytokines such as TGF-beta, cytokine receptors such as the IL-2 receptor beta and gamma chains or the IL-4 receptor and the genes for the transcription factor wt-1 (Wilms' tumor gene) and for the proto-oncogene bcl-2, both shown to be present in the majority of patients with AML. Additionally the line can be used as target in cytotoxicity assays using IL-2 activated cytotoxic lymphocytes as effector cells. In conclusion, besides a rare karyotype the Ei501 cell line has several features common in AML, and may therefore be used as a model to study pathogenetic mechanisms in acute myeloid leukemia.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of a new, factor-independent acute myeloid leukemia line designated Ei501. 918 Feb 96

We have identified ten patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and one patient with chronic myeloid leukemia with megakaryocytic crisis who displayed an inv(3)(q21q26). Seven of them had an additional monosomy 7. Most of them had a myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) preceding AML, normal or increased platelet counts, increased number of megakaryocyte, megakaryocytic dysplasia, and erythroid dysplasia. There was a high incidence of resistance to induction chemotherapy, short remission time, and early relapse. Seven patients were immunologically analyzed. The main immunophenotypes were as follow: CD7+, CD34+, HLA-DR+, CD38+, CD13+, CD33+, CDw65+, CD2-, CD3-, CD4-, CD8-, CD19+, CD20-, CD11b-. Our results suggest that the leukemia with inv(3)(q21q26) represents a new cytogenetic-clinicopathologic subtype, characterized by 1) abnormal megakaryopoiesis and multiple hematopoietic lineage involvement; 2) an antecedent MDS; 3) poor response to conventional chemotherapy; and 4) expression of CD7, CD34, CD38, HLA-DR, CD13, and CD33 antigens. We propose that the malignant transformation in patients with inv(3)(q21q26) occurs in an early stem cell prior to lineage commitment.
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PMID:Chromosomal abnormality inv(3)(q21q26) associated with multilineage hematopoietic progenitor cells in hematopoietic malignancies. 920 72

On the subject of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), there is little consensus about the target cell within the hematopoietic stem cell hierarchy that is susceptible to leukemic transformation, or about the mechanism that underlies the phenotypic, genotypic and clinical heterogeneity. Here we demonstrate that the cell capable of initiating human AML in non-obese diabetic mice with severe combined immunodeficiency disease (NOD/SCID mice) - termed the SCID leukemia-initiating cell, or SL-IC - possesses the differentiative and proliferative capacities and the potential for self-renewal expected of a leukemic stem cell. The SL-ICs from all subtypes of AML analyzed, regardless of the heterogeneity in maturation characteristics of the leukemic blasts, were exclusively CD34++ CD38-, similar to the cell-surface phenotype of normal SCID-repopulating cells, suggesting that normal primitive cells, rather than committed progenitor cells, are the target for leukemic transformation. The SL-ICs were able to differentiate in vivo into leukemic blasts, indicating that the leukemic clone is organized as a hierarchy.
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PMID:Human acute myeloid leukemia is organized as a hierarchy that originates from a primitive hematopoietic cell. 921 98

A quantitative analysis of expression levels of GM-CSF receptors was performed by flow cytometry in different disease categories, ie AML (n = 72), ALL (n = 18), and MDS (n = 12), as well as 12 healthy volunteers, using three different unconjugated GM-CSF/R monoclonal antibodies (McAbs) (HGM-CSFR (CD116), M5D12, 4B5F5), and appropriate standards. By using the reference HGM-CSFR McAb, in healthy subjects we found detectable levels of GM-CSF/R on blood monocytes (mean MESF (molecules of equivalent soluble fluorochrome)/cell: 36.1 x 10[3]), neutrophils (mean MESF/cell: 7.4 x 10[3]), bone marrow (BM) myelo-monocytic precursors (MESF range for the myeloid component, ie promyelocytes, myelocytes, metamyelocytes: 11.7-40.5 x 10[3], and for the monocytic lineage: 25.7-69.2 x 10[3]), and in two distinct subsets of BM CD34+ progenitor cells (GM-CSF/R dim: 2.5 x 10[3] MESF/cell, GM-CSF/R bright (10% of the total number of CD34 cells: 22.0 x 10[3] MESF/cell). In these subjects, there was no correlation between the expression levels of GM-CSF/R and CFU (CFU-GM, CFU-GEMM, BFU-E) colony production. Among the AML samples, M5D12 McAb was positive in 33%, 4B5F5 McAb in 90%, and HGM-CSF/R McAb in 78% of the cases examined (range of MESF/cell for the HGM-CSFR McAb: 0.9 x 10[3]-106.7 x 10[3]). The highest MESF values were seen in the M5 FAB subvariety (mean: 39.4 x 10[3]), where all the patients tested (n = 20) showed a strong positivity for the HGM-CSFR McAb. On the contrary, all ALL samples were GM-CSF/R negative except in two patients, who displayed a dim GM-CSF/R positivity (My+ALL: 1.3 x 10[3] MESF/cell; pro-B ALL: 1.0 x 10[3] MESF/cell). In most (>70%) M1 FAB subtypes, GM-CSF/R+ blasts co-expressed CD34low, HLA-DRhigh, CD33, CD38 antigens, and had little or no capacity to form CFU-GM colonies. GM-CSF/R+ blasts from the M5 FAB category were also positive for CD14, CD11c, CD33 and CD87. Furthermore, the number of GM-CSF/R expressed by leukemic cells from five out of 72 (7%) AML patients was above the highest values seen in normal samples (>69.2 x 10[3] MESF/cell), allowing the possibility of using this marker for the monitoring of the minimal residual disease (MRD) in a subset of AML. Cell culture studies aimed at evaluating GM-CSF receptor modulation following AML blast exposure to rhGM-CSF showed two distinct patterns of response; in the first group (6/10 cases) rhGM-CSF down-modulated GM-CSF receptors, whereas in the second group (4/10 cases), rhGM-CSF treatment was associated with either an increase or no change in the number of GM-CSF/R. In conclusion, cellular GM-CSF/R expression was variable and ranged from undetectable (ALL and a minority of AML) to very high intensities in M5 AML, and were also documented in some M0 AML, thus suggesting the concept that GM-CSF/R detection may be of help in lineage assignment of undifferentiated forms. Since the number of GM-CSF/R on AML blasts may be modulated after GM-CSF treatment, it can be postulated that the clinical use of GM-CSF in this disease may be optimized by a dynamic analysis of the number and the affinity status of GM-CSF-R in blasts and normal hemopoietic cells.
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PMID:Flow cytometry measurement of GM-CSF receptors in acute leukemic blasts, and normal hemopoietic cells. 932 92

Human C/EBP epsilon is a newly cloned CCAAT/enhancer-binding transcription factor. Initial studies indicated it may be an important regulator of human myelopoiesis. To elucidate the range of expression of C/EBP epsilon, we used reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis and examined its expression in 28 hematopoietic and 14 nonhematopoietic cell lines, 16 fresh myeloid leukemia samples, and normal human hematopoietic stem cells and their mature progeny. Prominent expression of C/EBP epsilon mRNA occurred in the late myeloblastic and promyelocytic cell lines (NB4, HL60, GFD8), the myelomonoblastic cell lines (U937 and THP-1), the early myeloblast cell lines (ML1, KCL22, MDS92), and the T-cell lymphoblastic leukemia cell lines CEM and HSB-2. For the acute promyelocytic leukemia cell line NB4, C/EBP epsilon was the only C/EBP family member that was easily detected by RT-PCR. No C/EBP epsilon mRNA was found in erythroid, megakaryocyte, basophil, B lymphoid, or nonhematopoietic cell lines. Most acute myeloid leukemia samples (11 of 12) from patients expressed C/EBP epsilon. Northern blot and RT-PCR analyses showed that C/EBP epsilon mRNA decreased when the HL60 and KG-1 myeloblast cell lines were induced to differentiate toward macrophages. Similarly, Western blot analysis showed that expression of C/EBP epsilon protein was either unchanged or decreased slightly as the promyelocytic cell line NB4 differentiated down the macrophage-like pathway after treatment with a potent vitamin D3 analog (KH1060). In contrast, C/EBP epsilon protein levels increased dramatically as NB4 cells were induced to differentiate down the granulocytic pathway after exposure to 9-cis retinoic acid. Furthermore, very early, normal hematopoietic stem cells (CD34+/CD38-), purified from humans had very weak expression of C/EBP epsilon mRNA, but levels increased as these cells differentiated towards granulocytes. Likewise, purified granulocytes appeared to express higher levels of C/EBP epsilon mRNA than purified macrophages. Addition of phosphothiolated antisense, but not sense oligonucleotides to C/EBP epsilon, decreased clonal growth of HL-60 and NB4 cells by about 50% compared with control cultures. Taken together, our results indicate that expression of C/EBP epsilon is restricted to hematopoietic tissues, especially myeloid cells as they differentiate towards granulocytes and inhibition of its expression in HL-60 and NB4 myeloblasts and promyelocytes decreased their proliferative capacity. Therefore, this transcriptional factor may play an important role in the process of normal myeloid development.
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PMID:A novel, myeloid transcription factor, C/EBP epsilon, is upregulated during granulocytic, but not monocytic, differentiation. 932 25

We evaluated the feasibility of collecting peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) in patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) following two cycles of induction chemotherapy with idarubicin, cytarabine and etoposide (ICE), and one cycle of consolidation therapy with high-dose cytarabine and mitoxantrone (HAM). Thirty-six patients of the multicentre treatment trial AML HD93 were enrolled in this study, and a sufficient number of PBPC was harvested in 30 (83%). Individual peak concentrations of CD34+ cells in the blood varied (range 13.1-291.5/microl; median 20.0/microl). To reach the target quantity of 2.5 x 10(6) CD34+ cells/kg, between one and six (median two) leukaphereses (LP) were performed. The LP products contained between 0.2 x 10(6) and 18.9 x 10(6) CD34+ cells/kg (median 1.2 x 10(6)/kg). Multivariate analysis showed that the white blood cell count prior to HAM and the time interval from the start of HAM therapy to reach an unsupported platelet count > 20 x 10(9)/l were predictive for the peak value of CD34+ cells in the blood during the G-CSF stimulated haematological recovery. In 16 patients an intraindividual comparison was made between bone marrow (BM) and PBPC grafts. Compared to BM grafts, PBPC grafts contained 14-fold more MNC, 5-fold more CD34+ cells and 36-fold more CFU-GM. A CD34+ subset analysis showed that blood-derived CD34+ cells had a more immature phenotype as indicated by a lower mean fluorescence intensity for HLA-DR and CD38. In addition, the proportion of CD34+/Thy-1+ cells tended to be greater in the PBPC grafts. The data indicate that sufficient PBPC can be collected in the majority of patients with AML following intensive double induction and first consolidation therapy with high-dose cytarabine and mitoxantrone.
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PMID:Successful collection of peripheral blood progenitor cells in patients with acute myeloid leukaemia following early consolidation therapy with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-supported high-dose cytarabine and mitoxantrone. 937 60

Clinical studies of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) suggest that the immune system contributes to the eradication of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). A recent study also showed that the Fas (CD95/APO1) mediates apoptotic signal from cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Sixty-four patients with AML were studied for the expression of Fas in the context of CD34 and CD38 coexpression. The clinical relevance of Fas expression and function on AML was also investigated. Fas was expressed on 2% to 98% of AML cells (2% to 20% in 11 patients, 20% to 50% in 20 patients, 50% to 80% in 24 patients, and 80% to 98% in nine patients). Only 44.4% of patients with AML M1 (French-American-British [FAB] classification) were Fas+ (>/=20% of leukemia cells expressed Fas), whereas 89.1% of patients with AML M2, M3, M4, M5 were Fas+ (P < .01). Among 43 CD34+ patients (>/=20% leukemia cells were CD34+), 34 were Fas+, and 19 of 21 CD34- patients were Fas+ (P = NS). Thirteen cases were studied for their expression of Fas in the context of CD34 and CD38 using three-color analysis. Fas is expressed at a high level in the gated CD34+CD38+/- and CD34+CD38+ population. In 10 AML samples, Fas was expressed at a higher level in CD34+/CD38+ population than in CD34+/CD38+/- or CD34- cell populations. Fas-induced apoptosis by anti-Fas monoclonal antibody (MoAb) was determined by morphologic features and colorimetric DNA fragmentation assay. Induction of apoptosis was found in 14 of 24 cases. However, no statistically significant correlation was observed between Fas expression and induction of apoptosis. Leukemia colony-forming unit assays suggested that in some cases, Fas-induced apoptosis occurred in the clonogenic cell populations. Parameters such as laboratory and clinical data at initial diagnosis were correlated with Fas expression and only response to initial induction chemotherapy showed significant correlation with Fas expression (P < .05). We conclude that the majority of AML cells exhibit variable expression of Fas, and apoptosis could be induced by anti-Fas MoAb in some cases. Our results suggest the Fas-mediated apoptosis may be clinically relevant, whereas the issue of clonogenic leukemia cells and Fas expression needs further studies.
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PMID:Functional expression of Fas (CD95) in acute myeloid leukemia cells in the context of CD34 and CD38 expression: possible correlation with sensitivity to chemotherapy. 938 7

11q23 translocations (t(11q23)) are recurring cytogenetic abnormalities in both acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia, involving the same gene, ALL1 (or MLL). Mixed lineage antigen expression has been reported in these leukemias, but its frequency and clinical significance are unknown. We immunophenotyped leukemia cells from 19 adult de novo AML patients with t(11q23) by multiparameter flow cytometry. Translocations included t(6;11)(q27;q23), t(9;11)(p22;q23), t(9;11;19)(p22;q23;q13.3), t(2;11)(11;17)(q37;q11q23;q11), t(11;17)(q23;q25), t(11;19)(q23;p13.1), t(11;19)(q23;p13.3) and t(11;22)(q23;q11). FAB types were M4 and M5. The committed stem cell and myeloid antigens HLADr, CD4dim, CD11b, CD13, CD15, CD32, CD33, CD38 and CD64 were each expressed in 80-100% of cases, and the early stem cell and lymphoid antigens CD34, CD56, CD3, CD2 and CD7 in 42, 39, 16, 5 and 5%, respectively. Antigen expression frequencies did not differ from those in 443 adequately karyotyped M4 and M5 cases without t(11q23). Fifteen patients (79%) attained complete remission (CR); median CR duration and survival were 10.0 and 15.1 months. CR duration and survival did not correlate with antigen expression. In particular, patients with t(9;11) survived longer than those with other t(11q23) (median not reached vs 7.6 months; P = 0.048), but antigen expression did not differ in the two groups. Thus frequencies of lymphoid antigen expression are similar in AML with t(11q23) and in other FAB M4 and M5 cases, treatment outcome does not differ in t(11q23) cases with and without lymphoid antigen expression, and better outcome of patients with t(9;11) compared to other t(11q23) does not correlate with differences in antigen expression. Mixed lineage antigen expression is not a distinctive feature of AML with t(11q23).
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PMID:Acute myeloid leukemia with 11q23 translocations: myelomonocytic immunophenotype by multiparameter flow cytometry. 952 25

This study reports the immunophenotypic features of a series of 62 selected acute leukemia patients with increased incidence of argyrophilic proteins (AgNORs) at the time of initial diagnosis. Peripheral blood and bone marrow cells of patients with T-ALL, B-precursor ALL and AML were studied. The method of silver staining was used to determine the number of AgNORs per cell. Cell surface markers were detected by a standard immunofluorescence assay. To demonstrate the relationship between AgNOR quantity and cell proliferation, the expression of activation and proliferation antigens CD38 and CD71 was investigated. To characterize the immunophenotype and the discrete stages of differentiation, the wide panel of antibodies against lymphoid, myeloid and non-lineage specific antigens was used. The number of AgNORs at diagnosis ranged from 3.05 to 6.70. Immunophenotypic analysis showed a variation in CD38 and CD71 expression among different leukemia subtypes. CD71 antigen was more expressed in T-ALL than in B-precursor ALL or in AML. Notable was the relationship between increased AgNOR quantity and antigens that characterize the immaturity of leukemic cells. The association with CD7, CD2, CD5 (without CD3 membrane expression) and CD34 in T blasts was evident. High positivity of CD19, CD10, CD34 and HLA-DR in relation to the increased amount of AgNORs in B-lineage ALL was observed. The vast majority of AML patients with high numbers of AgNORs simultaneously expressed CD13, CD33, CD34 and HLA-DR. One third of AML cases coexpressed T cell marker CD7. In conclusion, the presence of increased numbers of AgNORs at diagnosis might reflect the dependence on an early stage of leukemia cell differentiation.
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PMID:The relationship between argyrophilic proteins and some immunophenotypic markers in acute leukemia cells. 960 7

The chemokine stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1) and its receptor CXCR-4 (fusin, LESTR) are likely to be involved in the trafficking of hematopoietic progenitor and stem cells, as suggested by the reduced bone marrow hematopoiesis in SDF-1-deficient mice and the chemotactic effect of SDF-1 on CD34+ progenitor cells. Migration of leukemic cells might also depend on the expression of chemokine receptors. Therefore, we analyzed expression of CXCR-4 on mobilized normal CD34+ progenitors and leukemic cells. In addition, SDF-1-induced transendothelial migration across a bone marrow endothelial cell layer was assessed in vitro. By flow cytometry, CXCR-4 was found to be expressed in significant amounts on circulating CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells, including more primitive subsets (CD34+/CD38- and CD34+/Thy-1+ cells). In accordance with the immunofluorescence data, CD34+ progenitors efficiently migrated across endothelium in response to SDF-1 containing conditioned medium from the stromal cell line MS-5. Leukemic blasts (mostly CD34+) from patients with acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) expressed variable amounts of CXCR-4, which was functionally active, as demonstrated by a positive correlation between the SDF-1-induced transendothelial migration and the cell surface density of CXCR-4 (r = 0.97). Also recombinant SDF-1beta induced migration of CXCR-4-positive leukemic blasts. The effect of both conditioned medium and recombinant SDF-1 was inhibited by a CXCR-4 blocking antibody. In contrast, CD34+ leukemic cell lines (KG1, KG1a, Kasumi-1, MOLM-1) expressed low levels or were negative for CXCR-4, and did not migrate. By reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), however, basal levels of CXCR-4 mRNA were also detected in all leukemic cell lines. We conclude that CXCR-4 is expressed on CD34+ cells including more primitive, pluripotent progenitors, and may therefore play a role in the homing of hematopoietic stem cells. CXCR-4 expressed in variable amounts on primary AML leukemic cells is functionally active and may be involved in the trafficking of malignant hematopoietic cells.
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PMID:The chemokine receptor CXCR-4 is expressed on CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors and leukemic cells and mediates transendothelial migration induced by stromal cell-derived factor-1. 961 48


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