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)

Monoclonal antibodies specific for queuine have been prepared. Synthetic 9-(5-carboxypentyl)queuine (cp9Q) was conjugated with bovine serum albumin (BSA) or keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH), and the conjugate was used to immunize BALB/c mice by intraperitoneal and subcutaneous injection. Monoclonal antibodies were subsequently obtained by fusion of spleen cells and the mouse myeloma cell line X63Ag8U1. An enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay (ELISA) using o-phenylenediamine as peroxidase substrate was used for screening of clones and characterization of antibodies. Inhibition experiments with various homologous nucleosides revealed that the monoclonal antibody designated as 2D8E6 has no cross-reactivity with guanosine, adenosine or 7-methylguanosine.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to queuine. 408 73

The ultrastructure of neoplastic plasma cells from a patient with prolonged multiple myeloma was studied in relation to its function, that is, the secretion of immunoglobulin light chain. Peroxidase-labelled antibodies, each monospecific to its immunoglobulin component chain, were used to localize intracellular immunoglobulin within myeloma cells under the electron microscope. By this method, only the kappa type light chain was detected within myeloma cells in bone marrow tissue of this patient, indicating that the occurrence of free kappa type light chains in serum and urine was due to the cessation of heavy chain synthesis within the myeloma cells. The kappa chain was demonstrated as conspicuous electron-dense precipitates in ergastoplasm, its cisternal space, external layer of nuclear membrane, and ribosomes associated with ergastoplasm and nuclear membrane. No immunoglobulin was demonstrated in an atypical Golgi complex, an organelle which is ordinarily engaged in protein synthesis. Numerous crystalline structures and similar inclusion bodies found in myeloma cells appeared to have arisen from the Golgi area, but they did not ever react with the peroxidase label. Discharge of the kappa chain from the cell seems to be carried out through cell fragmentation, possibly caused by progressive distension of the ergastoplasmic cavity.
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PMID:Ultrastructural study of human myeloma cells in relation to its function. 419 97

Paired staining with the unlabeled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) method and direct immunofluorescence (DIF) differentiated distinctly between gastrin- and somatostatin-producing cells in the human gastric antrum. Similar paired staining of complexed lambda and alpha chains in immunoglobulin (Ig)A myeloma cells, of kappa and free J chains in IgG myeloma cells, and of secretory IgA and its epithelial transport protein, the free secretory component (SC), in colonic crypt cells, demonstrated that PAP staining inhibits subsequent DIF staining of an antigenic determinant present on the same molecule as the antigen revealed by the brown color of diaminobenzidine (DAB) or present or an unassociated molecule in the same cell. A quenching effect of the DAB reaction product was noted for both fluorescein (green) and rhodamine (red) emissions. In addition, a blocking effect of the DAB deposits has been demonstrated and is assumed to be the principal methodological basis for the paired PAP-DIF staining approach omitting intermediate antibody elution, as well as for the more time-consuming sequential PAP staining with DAB substrate for the first and 4-chloro-1-naphthol (CN) for the second antigen. The quenching and blocking effects limit in practice the paired PAP-DIF method to the localization of antigens present in separate cells.
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PMID:Unlabeled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase method combined with direct immunofluorescence. 611 18

The functioning of the Golgi complex in protein intracellular transport is most simply understood in terms of its being composed of a sequence of functionally distinct subcompartments. For example, the influence of perturbation of cellular Na+-K+ balance on the transport of secretory and membrane glycoproteins is to greatly slow their passage from relatively proximal to relatively distal subcompartments. To further the understanding of the nature of these subcompartments a rat IgM myeloma has been subjected to analytical subcellular fractionation. Fractions selectively enriched in distinct Golgi-associated activities have been prepared and their membrane proteins compared with those of rough microsomal fractions. The subfractionation is extensive and suggests the possibility of obtaining well resolved Golgi subfractions. Myeloma cells stained intracellularly with Concanavalin A- and wheatgerm agglutinin--peroxidase conjugates show distinct labelling patterns. Concanavalin A stains the entirety of the rough endoplasmic reticulum as well as the proximal face of the Golgi stack. Wheatgerm agglutinin stains the distal face of the stack of Golgi cisternae. The staining patterns are not due to immunoglobulin as they are also observed in myeloma variants that fail to synthesize immunoglobulin.
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PMID:The role of subcompartments of the Golgi complex in protein intracellular transport. 613 57

A normal antibody-producing cell only expresses one antibody, resulting in the well-known phenomenon of allelic exclusion. When two myeloma cells are fused, the derived hybrids are capable of co-dominantly expressing the antibody genes of both parents. Although the respective variable (V) and constant (C) region genes remain expressed in the same cis configuration, heavy and light chains of both parents are scrambled, and hybrid molecules are formed. The same is true when a myeloma and an antibody-producing cell are fused to produce a hybrid myeloma (hybridoma). Fusion therefore allows the production of hybrid immunoglobulin molecules containing two different combining sites. Hybrid molecules of this type retain antigen-binding activity and specificity. Bispecific monoclonal antibodies secreted by hybridomas may have a variety of uses in biology and in medicine. Here we have focused on their application in histochemistry. As an example, we have prepared and tested an anti-somatostatin-anti-peroxidase bispecific antibody. This way of producing hybrid molecules is superior to the production of hybrid antibodies by chemical reconstitution methods because the drastic treatment required for chain separation in the latter is likely to lead to some protein denaturation and loss of antibody activity. Intracellularly synthesized and assembled hybrids do not suffer from this disadvantage. In addition, the recombination of heavy and light chains from different antibody molecules is likely to lead to considerable waste.
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PMID:Hybrid hybridomas and their use in immunohistochemistry. 613 72

Evidence for recovery of surface membrane and its fusion with Golgi cisternae has been obtained previously in several glandular cells. This study was conducted to determine whether or not membrane is similarly retrieved from the surfaces of plasma cells from lymph nodes (of rats immunized with horseradish peroxidase [HRP]) and mouse myeloma cells (RPC 5.4 and X63 Ag 8 cell lines). Electron-dense tracers (cationic and anionic ferritin, HRP) were used to trace the pathways followed by surface membrane recovered by endocytosis, and immunocytochemistry was used to identify the secretory compartments. When plasma cells or myeloma cells were incubated with cationized ferritin (CF), it bound to the cell surfaces and was taken up in endocytic vesicles, for the most part bound to the vesicle membrane. After 30-60 min, it was found increasingly within lysosomes and in several secretory compartments- notably in multiple stacked Golgi cisternae and secretory vacuoles. By immunocytochemistry the secretory product (immunoglobulins) and CF could be demonstrated in the same Golgi components. When myeloma cells were incubated with native (anionic) ferritin or in HRP, these tracers were taken up in much smaller amounts, primarily within the contents of endocytic vesicles. With continued incubation, they appeared only in lysosomes. When cells were doubly incubated, first in CF and then in HRP, both tracers were taken up (often within the same endocytic vesicle), but they maintained their same destinations as when incubated in a single tracer alone: the content marker, HRP, was localized exclusively within the lysosomal system, whereas the membrane marker, CF, was found within elements along the secretory pathway as well as within lysosomes. The findings demonstrate the existence of considerable membrane traffic between the cell membrane and the Golgi cisternae and lysosomes in both normal plasma cells and myeloma cells. Because myeloma cells behave like the glandular cells studied previously with regard to pathways of retrieved surface membrane, they represent a suitable and promising system for further studies of mechanisms and pathways of membrane retrieval and recycling in secretory cells.
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PMID:Pathways followed by membrane recovered from the surface of plasma cells and myeloma cells. 615 78

The authors describe a 70-year-old woman with multiple myeloma and adult Fanconi syndrome. A monoclonal protein of IgA heavy-chain class and kappa light-chain class was demonstrable in the serum. Urine immunoelectrophoresis showed the presence of kappa light chains. Bone marrow aspirate showed increased plasma cells with large bundles of pink-staining Auer-rod-like crystals in their cytoplasm. These crystals failed to stain with Sudan black B, peroxidase, esterase, and PAS, but showed strong acid phosphatase and beta-glucuronidase positivity. Ultrastructural studies showed them to have a fibrillar and an unusual cross-striated pattern. Immunofluorescent studies showed strong IgA and kappa activity in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells, but the fluorescence was absent in the region of the crystals, which were identified easily by their negative birefringence. The authors interpret these observations to indicate that the intracytoplasmic crystals in this case are of lysosomal origin.
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PMID:Nature of intracytoplasmic crystalline inclusions in myeloma cells (morphologic, cytochemical, ultrastructural, and immunofluorescent studies). 619 1

A factor(s) present in supernatants from lectin-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells promoted the production of basophil-like cells in liquid cultures of normal human bone marrow cells. The cultured basophil-like cells had lobulated or round nuclei, and the cytoplasmic granules stained metachromatically with toluidine blue and azurophilic with Giemsa. 20% of the metachromatically staining cells were peroxidase positive but not positive for nonspecific esterase. The histamine content was 0.5-2 pg/cell. The basophil-like cells released histamine upon challenge with calcium ionophore A23187 but not with compound 48/80. They also released histamine with anti-IgE when passively sensitized with human myeloma IgE. The development of basophil-like cells was promoted in a dose-dependent fashion by a factor(s) in the conditioned medium. Blocking of cell proliferation with hydroxyurea or X irradiation inhibited the development of basophil-like cells. The production of the factor was dependent on the presence of T cells. The factor was different from interleukin 2 and its molecular weight was estimated to be 25,000-40,000 by gel filtration on a Sephacryl S-200 column. Thus, human basophil-like cells derived from normal bone marrow cells can grow and differentiate in vitro under the regulation of T cells.
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PMID:Factor-dependent in vitro growth of human normal bone marrow-derived basophil-like cells. 619 37

We investigated the subcellular sites of glycoprotein oligosaccharide maturation by using lectin conjugates to stain lightly-fixed, saponin-permeabilized myeloma cells. At the electron microscopic level, concanavalin A-peroxidase stains the cisternal space of the nuclear envelope, the rough endoplasmic reticulum, and cisternae along the proximal face of the Golgi stack. Conversely, wheat germ agglutinin-peroxidase stains cisternae along the distal face of the Golgi stack, associated vesicles, and the cell surface. These observations confirm the existence of two qualitatively distinct Golgi subcompartments, show that the lectin conjugates can be employed as relatively proximal or distal Golgi markers under conditions of excellent ultrastructural preservation, suggest that the asymmetric distribution of qualitatively distinct oligosaccharides is a property of underlying cellular components and not simply of the principal secretory product, and suggest that the oligosaccharide structure recognized by wheat germ agglutinin is attained during transport from the proximal toward the distal face of the Golgi stack.
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PMID:Lectin-binding sites as markers of Golgi subcompartments: proximal-to-distal maturation of oligosaccharides. 619 63

Nine hybrid cell lines producing antibodies specific for cytomegalovirus (CMV) antigen were obtained after fusion of P3/X63-Ag8 myeloma cells with spleen cells from BALB/c mice immunized with CMV complement-fixing antigen. By the immunoblot technique, five of nine antibodies (4D11, 7B4, 7D2, 8E3, and 8E10) were identified as being reactive to a CMV glycosylated polypeptide with molecular weight of 66,000 (GP66). Four other antibodies (1B8, 8E9, 4D2, and 7E2) appeared to be reactive with CMV antigen(s) only if the antigen was not denatured by sodium dodecyl sulfate. These remain unassigned until further studies are done. With the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), competitive bindings were performed with a constant amount of horseradish peroxidase-conjugated antibody and various concentrations of unconjugated homologous and heterologous antibodies on CMV antigen-coated ELISA wells, and the antigenic determinant specific for each antibody was determined. The nine antibodies could be classified into six different groups, each group reacting with a different epitope or a different region with two or more antigenic determinants which are so close to each other that they cause binding inhibition. They are groups A (4D11), B (7B4, 8E10), C (7D2), D (4D2, 7E2, 8E9), E (8E3), and F (1B8). The extent of competition among antibodies within each group was the same. By using the two antibodies that reacted with different epitopes on GP66, a double-antibody sandwich ELISA method was developed. The method was sensitive enough to detect as little as 50% of the antigen present in one infected cell or 0.000245 U of CMV complement-fixing antigen per test well. Other strains of CMV (David, Kerr, Espilat, C-87, and five clinical isolates) gave positive results, whereas herpes simplex virus types 1 and 2, varicella-zoster virus and Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen preparations did not. By the indirect immunofluorescence assay, antibodies 4D11 and 8E3 were able to detect GP66 in the nucleus of CMV-infected F-5000 human embryonic fibroblasts as early as 2 h postinfection and were superior in this respect to the remaining seven antibodies tested. By the double-antibody sandwich ELISA, the presence of GP66 in CMV-infected cells was detected as early as 2 h postinfection.
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PMID:Production and characterization of monoclonal antibodies specific for a glycosylated polypeptide of human cytomegalovirus. 619 74


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