Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (multiple myeloma)
36,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Interleukin (IL) 11 is a recently described lymphokine which, like IL-6, stimulates normal hematopoietic murine and human hematopoietic progenitor cells and therefore has potential value for either enhancing hematopoiesis in disease states or augmenting hematopoietic recovery after myeloablative therapies. Since IL-6 is known to promote the growth of human myeloma, either in an autocrine or paracrine fashion, we examined the effect of IL-11 on the growth of a murine plasmacytoma cell line, human myeloma-derived cell lines, and freshly isolated human myeloma cells. Interleukin 11 does increase DNA synthesis by the murine plasmacytoma line T10 in the presence of neutralizing antibody to IL-6. However, neither human myeloma cells nor derived cell lines express IL-11 mRNA; secrete IL-11; express IL-11 cell surface receptors; or augment either DNA synthesis or Ig secretion in response to exogenous IL-11. These findings strongly suggest that IL-11 does support the growth of a murine plasmacytoma cell line but does not play a role in the growth of either freshly isolated human myeloma cells or derived cell lines.
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PMID:Lack of a role of interleukin 11 in the growth of multiple myeloma. 153 43

Dual-parameter flow cytometric analysis of B-cell antigens and DNA content was used to determine the phenotypes of proliferating tumor cells (S-phase cells) from 30 patients with multiple myeloma. B4 (CD19), J5 (CALLA, CD10), B1 (CD20), and monotypic surface immunoglobulin (Slg) were expressed heterogeneously in 24 patients. J5 and monotypic Slg were found most frequently but were always expressed on a significantly lower percentage of cells than the antigens typically associated with plasma cells, cytoplasmic immunoglobulin (Clg) and T10 (CD38). S-phase cells were found in each antigen(+) subset. B antigen(+) cycling cells were demonstrated in 16 patients whose marrow or blood cells expressed B antigens exclusively in the hyperdiploid fraction and therefore were certainly part of the myeloma clone. Similar to the low level of proliferative activity of the T10(+), Clg(+), and PCA1(+) subsets, the percentages of cycling cells of the preplasma cell B-antigen-bearing myeloma subsets ranged from less than 1% to 12%. The tumor cells of four patients were also studied with dual-color surface antigen analysis and demonstrated independent expression of B antigens, with only rare coexpression of T10 and monotypic Slg, J5, or B4. These findings are consistent with the presence of distinct myeloma subsets bearing differing B phenotypes in the same tumor and provide evidence that the proliferation in myeloma is occurring at various developmental stages in the malignant B lineage. These antigens may be important targets for immunologic therapy aimed at eliminating the entire proliferating compartment of this B-cell tumor.
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PMID:B-cell surface phenotypes of proliferating myeloma cells: target antigens for immunotherapy. 230 68

Using a serum-free defined medium, we have established a human cell line, NCI-H929, from a malignant effusion occurring in a patient with IgAk myeloma. The cultured cells have the morphologic, ultrastructural, biochemical, immunologic, and cytochemical features of plasma cells. The cells have rearranged alpha and kappa genes and synthesize and secrete high amounts of IgAk (greater than 80 micrograms/10(6) cells per 24 hours). The cells express surface immunoglobulin (alpha and kappa), the plasma cell antigen PCA-1, the transferrin receptor (T9) and T10 but lack antigens associated with earlier stages of B cell development (HLA-DR, B1, B2, B4, CALLA), as well as other leukocyte-macrophage antigens and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) nuclear antigen. Although molecular studies confirm that both the tumor and cultured cells are derived from the same clone of malignant B cells, the tumor cells were predominantly near-diploid, whereas the cultured cells are predominantly near-tetraploid with six copies of chromosome 8, four to six of which have an 8q + abnormality. However, both the tumor and the cultured cells have a rearrangement of the cellular c-myc proto-oncogene (located at 8q24) and express c-myc RNA. Although a modest number of human "plasmacytoid" cell lines have been established, most are lymphoblastoid lines lacking plasma cell features, while others appear to be early secretory cells. In contrast, NCI-H929 is a differentiated, highly secretory human plasma cell line.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of a human plasma cell myeloma culture having a rearranged cellular myc proto-oncogene. 242 57

Four cases of plasma cell leukemia (PCL) are reported that illustrate the variable immunotype of this disorder in contrast with the immunologic profile described for normal B-cell maturation and typical multiple myeloma (MM). Mature B-lymphocytes express B1 antigen (Ag) and surface immunoglobulin (SIg) whereas maturation to the plasma cell stage is accompanied by loss of these immunologic markers and expression of T10 Ag, plasma cell Ag (PCA), and cytoplasmic immunoglobulin (CIg). Plasma cells from patients with MM have previously been found to express the immunophenotype of normal plasma cells. In contrast, none of the four cases reported here express an immunologic profile typical for specific B-cell differentiation stages. Only one of four cases was strongly positive for PCA but additionally expressed B1 Ag and SIg. Of the remaining three cases, all expressed T10 Ag and CIg; two cases also expressed SIg, weak PCA, and B1 Ag. All four cases were monoclonal for lambda light chains and negative for common ALL Ag (CALLA). The variable expression of mature B-cell markers and plasma cell markers demonstrates the immunophenotypic spectrum of PCL; the prognostic significance of this heterogeneity needs to be more closely examined.
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PMID:Immunophenotypic spectrum of plasma cell leukemia. 291 94

A myeloma cell line, MM.1, has been established from the peripheral blood cells of a patient with immunoglobulin A myeloma. MM.1 grows in suspension either singly or in small clusters and secretes lambda-light chain. Phenotypically, MM.1 cells lack most B cell antigens, but they do express human leukocyte antigen DR, PCA-1, and T9 and T10 antigens. Molecular analysis of MM.1 demonstrates that it is negative for the presence of the Epstein-Barr virus genome. Southern analysis of MM.1 detected a rearrangement of the lambda-light chain gene, and Northern analysis revealed high levels of lambda gene expression. Cytogenetic analysis of the MM.1 cell line revealed the presence of seven related chromosomally abnormal cell lines characterized by numerical and structural aberrations, and it revealed five nonclonal abnormal cells. The most notable abnormality is a reciprocal translocation involving band q24.3 of chromosome 12 and band q32.3 of chromosome 14; translocations involving 14q32 are frequently observed in neoplasms of B cell origin.
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PMID:Characterization of a novel myeloma cell line, MM.1. 292 41

Four cases of plasmacytoma (PC), six cases of multiple myeloma (MM), and nine cases of immunoblastic lymphoma (IL) of B-cell phenotype were studied with a large panel of monoclonal antibodies applied to frozen tissue sections. There were no significant differences in the immunophenotypes of plasmacytomas and multiple myelomas. However, significant immunophenotypic differences were noticed between the plasmacytoma/multiple myeloma cases (PC/MM) and the immunoblastic lymphoma specimens. The PC/MM cases characteristically stained with alpha (or gamma) and T10 and did not usually stain with mu, leukocyte common antibodies, certain B-lineage antibodies (B1, T015, 4G7, 6A4), or Ia. In contrast, IL sections usually did not stain with alpha or T10 and generally did stain with mu (or gamma), leukocyte common antibodies, B-lineage antibodies, and Ia. Ki-67, an antibody to proliferating cells, stained significantly fewer cells in PC/MM than in IL and stained significantly fewer cells that had a good clinical outcome. We conclude that although no one antibody is useful in distinguishing PC/MM from IL, the application of a panel of antibodies may be helpful in making this distinction. The prognosis may correlate with the numbers of proliferating cells as measured by reactivity with Ki-67.
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PMID:Immunophenotypic differences between plasmacytoma/multiple myeloma and immunoblastic lymphoma. 335 76

We characterized phenotypic and functional properties of B cell lines obtained from patients with multiple myeloma to determine how well they conform to particular stages of B cell differentiation. This information is a prerequisite for using such lines as tools for studying B cell growth and the regulation thereof. Two lines, GM1312 and GM1500, expressed B1 and Ia, determinants on early B cells, but expressed little, if any, T10, a determinant expressed on plasma cells. By contrast, B1 and Ia were poorly expressed on two other lines, GM2132 and U266. T10 was expressed on GM2132 but not on U266. Using a reverse hemolytic plaque assay, we also assessed the numbers of cells actively secreting immunoglobulin (IgSCs) in such cultures to provide a functional marker of B cell differentiation. We observed consistently higher numbers of IgSCs in cultures of GM2132 than in GM1500 and GM1312. These phenotypic and functional markers were stable over several months. The data suggest that such cell lines represent early (GM1312, GM1500) and later stages (GM2132, U266) of B cell differentiation, although all lines were derived from patients with multiple myeloma.
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PMID:Phenotypic and functional analysis of B cell lines from patients with multiple myeloma. 389 68

A 55-y-old patient with multiple myeloma presented for restaging after chemotherapy and radiation. The patient had undergone vertebroplasty of multiple thoracic vertebrae because of painful compression fractures. The 18F-FDG PET images showed increased activity at the T8 and T10-T12 vertebral bodies. Comparison of the attenuation-corrected and non-attenuation-corrected images demonstrated that the activity was due to an artifact of attenuation correction. The CT scan correlated the sites of vertebroplasty to the 4 foci of increased uptake of 18F-FDG. The increasing use of vertebroplasty for malignant spinal fractures warrants vigilance for this artifact.
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PMID:Artifactual spinal metastases imaged by PET/CT: a case report. 1632 23

CD38 (also known as T10) was identified in the late 1970s in the course of pioneering work carried out at the Dana-Farber Cancer Center (Boston, MA) that focused on the identification of surface molecules involved in antigen recognition. CD38 was initially found on thymocytes and T lymphocytes, but today we know that the molecule is found throughout the immune system, although its expression levels vary. Because of this, CD38 was considered an "activation marker," a term still popular in routine flow cytometry. This review summarizes the findings obtained from different approaches, which led to CD38 being re-defined as a multifunctional molecule. CD38 and its homologue CD157 (BST-1), contiguous gene duplicates on human chromosome 4 (4p15), are part of a gene family encoding products that modulate the social life of cells by means of bidirectional signals. Both CD38 and CD157 play dual roles as receptors and ectoenzymes, endowed with complex activities related to signaling and cell homeostasis. The structure-function analysis presented here is intended to give clinical scientists and flow cytometrists a background knowledge of these molecules. The link between CD38/CD157 and human diseases will be explored here in the context of chronic lymphocytic leukemia, myeloma and ovarian carcinoma, although other disease associations are also known. Thus CD38 and CD157 have evolved from simple leukocyte activation markers to multifunctional molecules involved in health and disease. Future tasks will be to explore their potential as targets for in vivo therapeutic interventions and as regulators of the immune response.
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PMID:CD38 and CD157: a long journey from activation markers to multifunctional molecules. 2357 5

Multiple myeloma is a fatal hematological malignancy, with the most common localization being the spine. A 72-year-old male patient presented with progressive back pain and dysfunction of ambulation. Spinal computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed spinal cord compression at the T9-T10 level due to an extensive epidural mass in the spinal canal, a large lytic mass of T7-T12 with extraosseous extension and involvement of T9 and T10 vertebral pedicle and posterior wall. The patient underwent posterior spinal decompression and kyphoplasty of T9 and T10 with pedicle screw fixation in T7, T8, T11 and T12. Pain and neural function were improved significantly postoperatively. To our knowledge, such methods have rarely been used to treat a patient with intractable back pain and neurological compromise with multiple myeloma or spinal metastases.
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PMID:Open kyphoplasty in the treatment of a painful vertebral lytic lesion with spinal cord compression caused by multiple myeloma: A case report. 2376 Apr 56


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