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

To determine whether decreased alkaline phosphatase activity in the granules from neutrophils of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) was due to an absence of enzyme or the production of defective enzyme, we compared the immunologic properties of granule alkaline phosphatase derived from patients with CML with that of normal subjects and patients with polycythemia vera (PRV). Antisera prepared in rabbits against granule alkaline phosphatase purified from the neutrophils of a patient with PRV produced a single precipitin line of antigenic identity when reacted with extracts of normal, PRV, and CML neutrophil granules. A histochemical stain for alkaline phosphatase activity (alpha-naphthyl acid phosphate coupled with Fast Blue RR) specifically stained the precipitin line. A variety of quantitative precipitin techniques failed to produce satisfactory precipitation of alkaline phosphatase activity. Comparative analyses were therefore performed by affinity chromatography using goat antirabbit-gammaglobulin linked to Sepharose 4B to adsorb alkaline phosphatase complexed with rabbit gamma globulin. With this method, 100% of CML, normal, and PRV alkaline phosphatase could be adsorbed. Using limiting concentrations of antibody, a proportionally smaller fraction of enzyme activity was absorbed as the concentration of PRV alkaline phosphatase or normal alkaline phosphatase was increased. Extracts of CML granules containing comparable amounts of protein but 200-fold less alkaline phosphatase activity per milligram did not specifically reduce adsorption. Thus, in CML, we found no evidence that the granulocytes contained a large amount of antigenically normal but enzymatically defective alkaline phosphatase. Examination of electron micrographs revealed no significant differences in the number or distribution of granules in the granulocytes of normal subjects or patients with PRV or CML. This suggests that the low level of neutrophil alkaline phosphatase in CML granulocytes is the result of decreased enzyme content and not a consequence of synthesis of catalytically defective enzyme.
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PMID:Neutrophil alkaline phosphatase: comparison of enzymes from normal subjects and patients with polycythemia vera and chronic myelogenous leukemia. 4 59

Myeloproliferative disease of childhood is frequently associated with chromosomal anomalies, usually of the C group. Clinical features are similar to those of the juvenile type of chronic myeloid leukemia. A child with this disease is described. Marked myeloid proliferation, anemia, thrombocytopenia and hepatosplenomegaly were present; leukocyte alkaline phosphatase and fetal hemoglobin were moderately elevated. Chromosome analysis of bone marrow cells revealed a mosaicism 47,XX,+21/46,XX. Down's syndrome was ruled out by the child's normal phenotype and dermatoglyphic analysis. The cytogenetic finding is probably evidence for the clonal origin of the trisomy 21 cell line.
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PMID:Myeloproliferative disease of childhood associated with a trisomy 21 clone. 11 7

A cell-line derived from a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is described. The new cell-line, which has over 175 serial passanges in a 3 1/2-yr period, has the following characteristics: (1) CML cells started to proliferate actively since they were first incubated in culture media. A threefold increase in the total number of cells was observed during the first seven passages; the cell population increased by a factor of 10 to 20 every 7 days from passage 8 through 85; from 20 to 40 times from passage 86 through 150, and more than 40 times after 150 passages. (2) The majority of the nononucleated cells are undifferentiated blasts. (3) The karyotype of all the cells examined show the Philadelphia (Ph1) chromosome and a long acrocentric marker plus aneuploidy. The Giemsa-banding studies identified the Ph1 chromosome as a terminal deletion of the long arm of chromosome 22:del(22)(q12) and the long acrocentric marker as an unbalanced reciprocal translocation of one chromosome 17 and the long arm of one chromosome 15. (4) The CML cells do not produce immunoglobulins, are free of mycoplasma, Epstein-Barr virus, and herpes-like virus particles. (5) CML cells have no alkaline phosphatase and myeloperoxidase activities and did not engulf inert particles. (6) Cultured CML cells provide a constant source of a specific antigen. This CML cell-line represents a unique source of CML cells with meaningful indicators of malignancy for clinical and experimental studies.
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PMID:Human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell-line with positive Philadelphia chromosome. 16 58

Ultrastructural cytochemical changes occurring during the blast phase of chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML) are described. Normal developing promyelocytes contain myeloperoxidase (MPO) -positive rough endoplasmic reticulum, nuclear envelope, and Golgi apparatus. All secretory granules of normal promyelocytes are also MPO-positive. In this study we have found abnormal promyelocytes with MPO-positive as well as MPO-negative secretory granules in blast phase CML patients which contrast with the normal pattern of MPO distribution in most CML patients not in the blast phase or in nonleukemic controls. Alkaline phosphatase activity was found in the nuclear envelope of blasts and promyelocytes of one of the blast transformation patients who had a markedly increased leukocyte alkaline phosphatase score. The cytochemical changes in the distribution of MPO suggest that immature leukemic cells may alter their patterns of secretory granule production. Such processes may reflect the emergence of an abnormal clone of cells during the blastic transformation of CML.
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PMID:Ultrastructural cytochemical analysis of blastic transformation of chronic myelocytic leukemia. 19 Nov 21

Two patients with a typical hematologic pattern of acute lymphatic leukemia were brought into complete remission by treatment. A few weeks later they developed a typical peripheral and bone marrow pattern of chronic granulocytic leukemia, with Philadelphia chromosome and very low leukocyte alkaline phosphatase. These cases, along with other findings recently reported in the literature, support the possibility of a previously unrecognized relationship between lymphoblastic cell populations and chronic granulocytic leukemia.
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PMID:Lymphoid blastic crisis at the onset of chronic granulocytic leukemia: report of two cases. 26 31

In four patients with chronic myelocytic leukemia, a solitary rise in serum alkaline phosphatase (S-ALP) was noted 2--12 months prior to death. All patients had received busulphan (Myleran) therapy for longer than 12 months (total dosage 1.0--2.4 g). It is suggested that the increase in S-alp was due to a cholestatic liver damage, possible secondary to the busulphan treatment.
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PMID:Increase in serum alkaline phosphatase (S-ALP) in chronic myelocytic leukemia--sign of drug-induced cholestasis? 27 22

Fifty consecutive patients with blastic chronic myelogenous leukemia were evaluated clinically, morphologically, biochemically, and therapeutically. Forty-five patients had a preceding stable phase (38 Ph'+, 7 Ph'-); five patients presented with de novo Ph+ blast crisis. The most frequent clinical signs of impending blast crisis were weakness, fatigue, increasing splenomegaly, anemia, thrombocytopenia, marrow fibrosis, and a rising neutrophil alkaline phosphatase. Fever (unrelated to infection), skin infiltration, lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, thrombocytosis, and basophilia were much less common. The development of aneuploidy occurred in less than one-half of the total group. Myeloblastic morphology at blastic transformation was most frequent with occasional lymphoblastic, promyelocytic, and undifferentiated cases seen. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase was present in one-third of the patients, but had no clear-cut relationship to the morphology. Response to treatment was generally disappointing (two complete and 15 partial remissions in 45 treated patients).
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PMID:Blastic transformation in chronic myelogenous leukemia: experience with 50 patients. 27 33

Neutrophils from a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia and typically low leukocyte alkaline phosphatase (LAP) activity markedly increased in LAP content following transfusion to and circulation in an infected neutropenic recipient. Incubation of the recipient's serum and plasma with normal neutrophils failed to alter their LAP activity. This observation suggests that LAP activity is inducible by as yet unknown "environmental" factors, and possible mechanisms for this are discussed.
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PMID:Increased leukocyte alkaline phosphatase activity following transfusion of leukocytes from a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia. 28 6

A patient is described who has chronic granulocytic leukemia (CGL) and familial sarcoidosis, and who has been in complete remission for six years after a single course of busulfan therapy. Her bone marrow Philadelphia chromosome persists and the leukocyte alkaline phosphatase activity remains subnormal. Leukocyte alkaline phosphatase levels in nine white patients with sarcoidosis were all found to be low. Bone marrow chromosomes from two patients with active sarcoidosis showed no Philadelphia chromosome, but one of them, and our patient with CGL, exhibited a pericentric inversion of chromosome 9.
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PMID:Chronic granulocytic leukemia: long-term remission in a patient with familial sarcoidosis. 28 1

That most patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) have either very low levels or no leukocyte alkaline phosphatase activity (LAP) is an established fact. In view of our new findings7 that normal mature human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) contain two types of granules, azurophils (1/3) and specifics (2/3), and that alkaline phosphatase is present only in specific granules, we undertook the present studies to determine whether these neoplastic PMN lack a specific granule population or simply lack the enzyme. The cellular buffy coats of five patients with CML (Ph1 plus, LAP minus) were fixed in glutaraldehyde, incubated for peroxidase to identify the azurophil population, and examined by electron microscopy. It was found that the specific granule population was present in all mature PMN. Counts of both azurophil and specific granules per cell were slightly lower than normal but were within an 80%-90% overlap of the normal range. We therefore conclude that the low level of LAP in patients with CML reflects a deficiency of the enzyme rather than a missing granule population. Although the mature PMN appeared relatively normal (with few exceptions), circulating myeloblasts and promyelocytes revealed several abnormalities, the most notable being the presence of large bundles of cytoplasmic microfilaments. The blood of two patients in the terminal phase of disease was reexamined. Most of their cells were immature, with aberrations similar to those in myeloblasts and promyelocytes in the chronic phase of the disorder. In addition, however, we discovered three adnormal populations of mature PMN: (1) PMN containing both populations of granules but lacking peroxidase, (2) PMN lacking specific granules, and (3) PMN lacking azurophil granules. Our findings emphasize the value of electron microscopy and cytochemistry in detecting abnormalities of maturation in the cytoplasm of leukemic PMN.
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PMID:Azurophil and specific granules of blood neutrophils in chronic myelogenous leukemia: an ultrastructural and cytochemical analysis. 105 64


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