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Query: UMLS:C0023473 (
chronic myeloid leukemia
)
18,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chronic myelogenous leukaemia
is a clonal neoplasm of the pluripotent haematopoietic stem cell which is characterized in most patients by a consistent cytogenetic abnormality known as the Philadelphia chromosome. This chromosome occurs as a consequence of a reciprocal translocation between the long arms of chromosomes 9 and 22 which results in the creation of a new gene comprising sequences from the c-abl gene on chromosome 9 and the
bcr
gene on chromosome 22. The protein encoded by this structurally altered hybrid gene differs from the normal c-abl gene product in both molecular weight and in tyrosine kinase activity. It is likely that these alterations in the c-abl gene product play a central role in the pathogenesis of this leukaemia.
...
PMID:Molecular pathogenesis of chronic myelogenous leukaemia. 130 82
Irradiated mice reconstituted with bone marrow cells infected with a retrovirus carrying the
bcr
-abl oncogene of human
chronic myeloid leukemia
are subject to a range of neoplastic hematopoietic diseases, both myeloid and lymphoid. Comparison of DBA/2 and C57BL/6 mice has revealed a marked strain difference in susceptibility to the various tumor types. The present study, performed with BALB/c mice, indicates that the kinetics and nature of the induced disease can be modulated by the infection procedure, as well as the genetic background, and that retroviral regulatory sequences may influence the outcome. A distinctive clonal myeloproliferative disorder, somewhat akin to
chronic myeloid leukemia
but with prominent erythroid and mast cell components, as well as granulocytic excess, was characterized.
...
PMID:Hematologic disease induced in BALB/c mice by a bcr-abl retrovirus is influenced by the infection conditions. 131 70
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) cannot be used to amplify the breakpoint in the chimaeric BCR-ABL gene in
CML
and acute leukaemias due to the large variation in the sites of breakpoint in the
BCR gene
(within a 5.8 kb region) and in the ABL gene (within a 150 kb region). The disease state is usually monitored using RNA-PCR to monitor abnormal transcripts. We have used a new modification of the PCR to amplify breakpoints within zone 3 of the M-
bcr
. A synthetic oligonucleotide linker, the Vectorette, is ligated to restriction digested DNA, and amplification is carried out between primers for a known target sequence and the Vectorette linker. Three Philadelphia chromosome Ph1-positive
CML
patients with breakpoints within the ALU region of zone 3 have been amplified and the sequence immediately around the breakpoint determined. The breaks occurred within 70 bp and two were only 14 bp apart. The Vectorette-PCR technique has the potential to rapidly identify and sequence breakpoints, and will enable the design of patient-specific primers to monitor disease progression, particularly following bone marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Amplification and sequencing of genomic breakpoints located within the M-bcr region by Vectorette-mediated polymerase chain reaction. 131 90
Philadelphia chromosome (Ph') was detected at presentation in 10 out of 110 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and five of 168 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Two other ALL patients who had studies at relapse were also included in the analyses. One of the 12 Ph'-positive (Ph+) ALL patients had simultaneous expression of myeloid-associated antigen on the leukemic blasts, while all the five AML patients coexpressed markers of lymphoid cells. Double labeling of the cells with myeloperoxidase and CD10 on three Ph+ AML cases showed that most leukemic blasts expressed either myeloperoxidase activity or CD10 but not both. Cross-lineage gene rearrangements of T-cell receptor (TCR) beta-chain gene were detected in three of the eight Ph+ ALL patients tested. All the four Ph+ AML cases studied showed immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements, and three of them also had simultaneous rearrangements of TCR beta-chain gene. The results revealed that Ph+ acute leukemia in this study belonged either to ALL or mixed lineage leukemia, and none was pure AML. This finding is contrary to that of acute blast crisis of
chronic myelogenous leukemia
in which the majority of patients had myeloid transformation. Rearrangements of
bcr
were detected in four of the 10 Ph+ ALL and three of the four Ph+ AML patients tested. No significant difference was noted in the clinical or hematologic manifestations among Ph+ leukemia with or without
bcr
rearrangements.
...
PMID:Characterization of Philadelphia-chromosome-positive acute leukemia by clinical, immunocytochemical, and gene analysis. 132 82
The hallmark of
chronic myelogenous leukemia
is the translocation of the human c-abl protooncogene (ABL) from chromosome 9 to the specific breakpoint cluster region (bcr) of the
BCR gene
on chromosome 22. The t(9;22)(q34;q11) translocation results in the formation of a BCR-ABL fusion gene that encodes a 210-kDa chimeric protein with abnormal tyrosine kinase activity. The ABL and BCR genes are expressed by normal cells and thus the encoded proteins are presumably nonimmunogenic. However, the joining-region segment of the p210BCR-ABL chimeric protein is composed of unique sequences of ABL amino acids joined to BCR amino acids that are expressed only by malignant cells. The current study demonstrates that the joining region of BCR-ABL protein is immunogenic to murine T cells. Immunization of mice with synthetic peptides corresponding to the joining region elicited peptide-specific, CD4+, class II major histocompatibility complex-restricted T cells. The BCR-ABL peptide-specific T cells recognized only the combined sequence of BCR-ABL amino acids and not BCR or ABL amino acid sequences alone. Importantly, the BCR-ABL peptide-specific T cells could recognize and proliferate in response to p210BCR-ABL protein. The response of peptide-specific T cells to protein demonstrated that p210BCR-ABL can be processed by antigen-presenting cells so that the joining segment is bound to class II major histocompatibility complex molecules in a configuration similar to that of the immunizing peptide and in a concentration high enough to stimulate the antigen-specific T-cell receptor. Thus, BCR-ABL protein represents a potential tumor-specific antigen related to the transforming event and shared by many individuals with
chronic myelogenous leukemia
.
...
PMID:T-cell immunity to the joining region of p210BCR-ABL protein. 134 32
We have been able to assign the human catechol-O-methyltransferase gene (COMT) to chromosome 22q11.2 by using Southern blot analysis of panels of somatic cell hybrids and chromosomal in situ hybridization. Furthermore, Southern blot analysis of DNA from blood and bone marrow samples of a patient with
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
), having an extra Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1) in addition to the one produced by the reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22, showed increased COMT and
BCR gene
dosage as compared to DNAs originating from
CML
patients with only one Ph1 chromosome or from chromosomally normal individuals. Control hybridizations of the same blot with TCRG- and TCRA-specific probes showed corresponding signal intensities in all samples. A relatively frequent two-allele COMT gene RFLP (PIC = 0.37) was recognized in DNAs digested with BglI. Our gene mapping result is in concordance with that previously reported by Brahe et al. (1986), who used an autoradiozymogram assay on different somatic cell hybrids to map this gene to chromosome 22.
...
PMID:The human catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene maps to band q11.2 of chromosome 22 and shows a frequent RFLP with BglI. 134
We describe here a patient with accelerated phase Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1) negative
chronic myelogenous leukemia
without
BCR gene
rearrangement, who received an allogeneic bone marrow transplant following a conditioning regimen consisting of busulfan (BU) and cyclophosphamide (CY). Hematopoiesis was restored following splenectomy performed 1 month post-transplant. There were no distinguishing cytogenetic differences between donor and host. Five years post-transplant the patient relapsed with the original disease. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) studies performed at that time exhibited host specific DNA markers suggesting recurrent leukemia of host origin. RFLP analysis of the cells cryopreserved immediately post-transplant also revealed all cells to be of host origin. This patient experienced 5 years of remission with autologous hematopoietic recovery from an aggressive myeloproliferative disorder after high dose BU and CY without engraftment of donor hematopoietic cells.
...
PMID:Prolonged remission of accelerated phase Philadelphia chromosome negative chronic myeloid leukemia following autologous recovery of normal hematopoietic elements after busulfan/cyclophosphamide and allogeneic marrow transplantation. 134 49
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on the short arm of chromosome 3 was studied in four patients with
chronic myelogenous leukemia
(
CML
). The
bcr
gene rearrangement-negative spleen cells and a B-cell line were used as normal tissue controls. Five probes showing restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) and a variable number of tandem repeats on chromosome 3 were used. DNA patterns in Southern blotting were compared between normal cells and leukemic cells. One of the four patients had LOH at the D3S2 locus mapped to 3p14.3-3p21.3. The LOH was detected in the blastic phase, but not in the chronic phase. This patient showed normal chromosomes 3 in the blastic phase. These data suggest the possibility of the existence of LOH in
CML
, occurring as a secondary event in the blastic phase, and which might have been induced by submicroscopic deletion or somatic recombination.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity at D3S2 locus of short arm of chromosome 3 in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 135 8
The involvement of the BCRlABL fusion gene in patients with Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome positive
chronic myeloid leukaemia
(
CML
) and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) is well characterised, but the molecular events underlying the cases of Ph-negative
CML
and ALL that lack
BCR gene
involvement and those that cause transformation of Ph-positive
CML
are unknown. The murine ABL gene can be activated by genetic events that do not involve the
BCR gene
, including the introduction of two specific point mutations in exons VII and XI respectively, as found in the homologous sequence of the v-abl oncogene. We therefore sought evidence for analogous point mutations in the ABL gene in patients with Ph-negative, BCR-negative
CML
(n = 25), Ph-negative ALL (n = 18) and in Ph-positive
CML
in transformation (n = 28). We used restriction fragment length polymorphism and single strand conformational polymorphism techniques to analyse DNA amplified fragments of selected ABL coding regions from leukaemia cells. We identified only normal wild-type DNA sequences. The absence of these transforming point mutations does not exclude the possibility that the ABL gene in such patients could be activated by other means.
...
PMID:Specific point mutations that activate v-abl are not found in Philadelphia-negative chronic myeloid leukaemia, Philadelphia-negative acute lymphoblastic leukaemia or blast transformation of chronic myeloid leukaemia. 135 50
The chromosome 22 derivative, the Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome, results from the reciprocal translocation t(9;22) (q34;q11). On DNA level a BCR/ABL rearrangement involving the so-called major BCR (Mbcr) from chromosome 22 has been associated with
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
). For Ph+ ALL a site of rearrangements in the 5' part of the BCR (breakpoint cluster region) gene on chromosome 22, the so-called minor
bcr
region (mbcr) has been described within the first intron in a 10.8 kb region (=bcr2 or m-BCR1). The BB1 probe detects two Eco fragments of 8.5 and/or 11 kb, which may appear as monomorphic or heteromorphic alleles, both covering bcr2. We have analyzed EcoRI restriction polymorphisms within bcr2 in 42 patients with a rearrangement in M-
bcr
(including 39 Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+)
CML
patients and 3 ALLs) and in 18 healthy unrelated volunteers. Of the 42 patients tested, 52.4% (22) had the 8.5 kb bcr2 allele, 21.4% (9) had the 11 kb bcr2 allele, and 26.2% (11) had both the 8.5 and the 11 kb allele. In addition to normal allelic polymorphisms in bcr2, rRFs (rearranged bcr2 restriction fragments) were found in bcr2 as shown in 33% (14 of 42) of our patients. By contrast, no rRFs were found in 18 healthy volunteers. Our results indicate, that heterogeneous rearrangements in bcr2 may appear in addition to BCR/ABL rearrangements involving M-
bcr
in Ph+CML.
...
PMID:Minor BCR (m-bcr) rearrangements may appear in major BCR (M-bcr)-positive CML cases. 136 28
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