Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023473 (chronic myeloid leukemia)
18,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relative contributions made by the major class I (RT1.A) and class II (RT1.B) antigens of the rat major histocompatibility complex (MHC) to the immunogenicity of corneal and skin allografts were investigated using congenic animals. PVG (RT1c) recipients were given skin or heterotopic cornea grafts from congenic PVG.1A (RT1a) or PVG.R1 (RT1r1) donors, which respectively share the entire RT1 complex or only the RT1.A (major class I MHC antigen) region with fully allogeneic ACI (RT1a) rats. Recipient splenocytes were tested at ten days posttransplant for their ability to lyse ACI, PVG.1A, PVG.R1, and PVG target cells in a secondary CML following 6 days in vitro stimulation with irradiated ACI spleen cells. Effector cells from PVG recipients of both RT1.A and B disparate (PVG.1A donor) and RT1.A disparate (PVG.R1) skin or cornea grafts lysed ACI, PVG.1A, and PVG.R1 (but not PVG) targets at levels significantly above controls given syngeneic grafts. However, the level of cytotoxicity against PVG.R1 as well as ACI and PVG.1A allogeneic targets was always significantly higher following PVG.1A grafts than following PVG.R1 grafts, indicating that the addition of a class II MHC antigen difference markedly augmented the immunogenicity of class I MHC antigen disparate cornea and skin grafts. Taken together with other recent evidence confirming the presence of Langerhans cells in the normal rat (and human) cornea, these results suggest that class II MHC-bearing cells make an important contribution to the immunogenicity of corneal allografts.
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PMID:Relative contribution of major histocompatibility complex antigens to the immunogenicity of corneal allografts. 351 52

Although systemic and local autoimmune diseases are the primary possibilities in the differential diagnosis of noninfectious peripheral ulcerative keratitis (PUK), other unusual etiologies such as systemic or local malignancies also must be considered. We report on two patients with PUK whose study led to the discovery and subsequent treatment of a chronic myelogenous leukemia and a sebaceous cell carcinoma of the eyelid, respectively. The results emphasize the need for meticulous diagnostic pursuit, including the possibility of malignancy in patients with peripheral ulcerative keratitis.
Cornea 1994 Jul
PMID:Peripheral ulcerative keratitis and malignancies. 792 39

A 17-year-old woman was admitted for bone marrow transplantation with the diagnosis of atypical Philadelphia-negative chronic myelogenous leukemia (aCML), cytogenetically characterized by trisomy 8 as the sole chromosome aberration. A striking feature was a congenital opacity of the right cornea. Chromosomal analysis of skin fibroblasts were performed and revealed a mosaic for trisomy 8. Commonly, a distinct clinical picture leads to the diagnosis of trisomy 8 mosaicism syndrome (T8ms), but an extreme phenotypic variability has been observed. To our knowledge the development of an aCML in a patient with T8ms has not been reported. A review of the literature revealed that an association to other hematological disorders had been described in two cases. The question of whether our patient's aCML was a random event or not is discussed. The patient is now 24 months post transplant and shows no evidence of disease. Her Karnofsky score is 100%. We conclude that it might be worthwhile to look for an associated constitutional trisomy 8 mosaicism in all patients with trisomy 8 leukemia.
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PMID:Atypical chronic myelogenous leukemia in a patient with trisomy 8 mosaicism syndrome. 843 24