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Query: UMLS:C0026986 (
myelodysplastic syndrome
)
14,926
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Plasma cell myeloma is a more complex neoplasm than suggested by the relative uniformity of its dominant plasma cells, which represent the terminal stage of normal B-cell differentiation. Phenotypic, molecular, and cellular genetic data favor the presence of a myeloma stem cell early in hematopoietic development so that, as in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), a far distance exists between the primordial malignant cell that was the target of malignant transformation and the dominant clinical phenotype. Traces of pre-B, myeloid, and T cells are coexpressed with the mature B-cell phenotype, an occurrence unknown in normal B-cell differentiation. Analogous to CML, disease progression is marked by disease dedifferentiation, occasionally with cessation of myeloma protein production and development instead of extramedullary lymphomalike features with high LDH or
myelodysplasia
/acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) syndromes. The prognostic importance of serum LDH levels even in newly diagnosed myeloma suggests the early presence of tumor cells with "LDH phenotype," which, as a result of drug resistance and proliferative advantage, expand preferentially during disease progression. Further characterization of these cells may provide important clues about the ontogeny of multiple myeloma. Myeloma cells express many receptors for different biological signals that might be exploitable for therapy with immunotoxins or radioisotopes. Plasma cells and their precursors also produce a variety of cytokines, some of which have putatively autostimulatory functions (eg, IL-1, IL-5, IL-6) and/or are related to disease manifestations (eg, IL-1 and
TNF-beta
as OAF). The wealth of cellular expression by plasma cells provides clues for understanding the mechanisms of gene activation and the nature of abnormal growth and differentiation. The accuracy of prognostically relevant staging systems has been refined with the use of new quantitative parameters that reflect tumor mass (ie, serum B2M levels) and biology. Further studies of cellular and molecular biology (ie, CAL-LA, H-ras) may reveal those tumor cell features that define clinical entities, response to therapy, and long-term prognosis. The lack of a major advance in prognosis despite the use of more drugs and more intensive regimens justifies the continued use of standard melphalan-prednisone for patients with a highly favorable prognosis, for the very aged, and for those with a short life expectancy due to other major medical problems. However, a radical departure from standard practice is required to improve the prognosis for younger patients with poor risk features.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Plasma cell myeloma--new biological insights and advances in therapy. 246 90
The effects of recombinant human interleukin 3 (IL3) on normal bone marrow cells and human leukemic cells were studied. In clonal assays, IL3 supported the growth of all colony types including megakaryocytes. Erythroid colonies were formed in the presence of IL3 and erythropoietin, but not in the absence of erythropoietin. Replating experiments using blast cell colonies derived from a cell population enriched for progenitor cells by fluorescence-activated cell sorting with the monoclonal antibody 3C5, showed that IL3 supported the continued replating of colonies. The clonal proliferation of human bone marrow cells in response to IL3 was inhibited by tumor necrosis factor and by
lymphotoxin
, but not by interferon-gamma. In suspension cultures, IL3 supported the proliferation of mast cells. Human IL3 had no effect on the growth responses, morphology, cytochemistry, or clonogenicity of the human leukemic cell lines HL60, U-937, KG1a, and HEL. Transcripts for IL3 mRNA were not detectable in these cells, nor in the K562 cell line, implying that autocrine secretion of IL3 was not the mechanism by which these leukemias were maintained. Although cells derived from the bone marrow or peripheral blood of twenty patients with myeloproliferative disorders,
myelodysplastic syndromes
or acute myeloid leukemia frequently showed proliferative responses to IL3, mRNA transcripts for IL3 were not detected in these cells.
...
PMID:Human interleukin 3: effects on normal and leukemic cells. 262 75
Fas antigen, a receptor molecule that mediates signals for programmed cell death, is involved in T-cell-mediated killing of malignant, virus-infected or allogeneic target cells. Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), potent inhibitors of haemopoiesis, enhance Fas receptor expression on bone marrow (BM) CD34+ cells, and both cytokines render haemopoietic progenitor cells susceptible to Fas-mediated inhibition of colony formation due to the induction of apoptosis. Haemopoietic suppression in aplastic anaemia (AA) has been associated with aberrant IFN-gamma, increased
TNF-beta
expression, and elevated numbers of activated cytotoxic T-cells in marrow. We have now examined Fas antigen expression in fresh AA BM samples. In normal individuals few CD34+ cells expressed Fas antigen and normal marrow cells had low sensitivity to Fas-mediated inhibition of colony formation. In contrast, in early AA, BM CD34+ cells showed markedly increased percentages of Fas receptor-expressing CD34+ cells, which correlated with increased sensitivity of AA marrow cells to anti-Fas antibody-mediated inhibition of colony formation. The proportion of Fas antigen-bearing cells was lower in recovered patients' BM. Fas antigen was also detected in the marrow of some patients with
myelodysplasia
, especially the hypocellular variant. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that AA CD34+ cells, probably including haemopoietic progenitor cells, express high levels of Fas receptor due to in vivo exposure to IFN-gamma and/or TNF-alpha and are suitable targets for T-cell-mediated killing. Our results suggest that the Fas receptor/Fas ligand system are involved in the pathophysiology of BM failure.
...
PMID:Increased expression of Fas antigen on bone marrow CD34+ cells of patients with aplastic anaemia. 757 42
Because human
lymphotoxin
(LT) was originally isolated from a lymphoblastoid cell line, we investigated the role of this molecule in three newly established Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-infected human B cell lines. These lines were derived from acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Z-6),
myelodysplastic syndrome
(Z-43), and acute myelogenous leukemia (Z-55) patients who had a prior EBV infection. Each lymphoblastoid cell line had a karyotype that was different from that of the original parent leukemic cells, and all expressed B cell, but not T cell or myeloid surface markers. In all three lines, rearranged immunoglobulin heavy chain joining region (JH) bands were found, and the presence of EBV DNA was confirmed by Southern blotting. Z-6, Z-43, and Z-55 cell lines constitutively produced 192, 48, and 78 U/ml LT, respectively, as assessed by a cytotoxicity assay and antibody neutralization. Levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) were undetectable. Scatchard analysis revealed that all the cell lines expressed high-affinity TNF/LT receptors with receptor densities of 4197, 1258, and 1209 sites/cell on Z-6, Z-43, and Z-55, respectively. Furthermore, labeled TNF binding could be reversed by both unlabeled TNF, as well as by LT. Studies with p60 and p80 receptor-specific antibodies revealed that the three lines expressed primarily the p80 form of the TNF receptor. When studied in a clonogenic assay, exogenous LT stimulated proliferation of all three cell lines in a dose-dependent fashion at concentrations ranging from 25 to 500 U/ml. Similar results were obtained with [3H]TdR incorporation. Monoclonal anti-LT neutralizing antibodies at concentrations of 25-500 U/ml inhibited cellular multiplication in a dose-dependent manner. It is interesting that in spite of a common receptor, TNF (1,000 U/ml) had no direct effect on Z-55 cell growth, whereas it partially reversed the stimulatory effect of exogenous LT. In addition, TNF inhibited Z-6 and Z-43 cell proliferation, and its suppressive effect was reversed by exogenous LT. Both p80 and p60 forms of soluble TNF receptors suppressed the lymphoblastoid cell line proliferation and their inhibitory effect was partially reversed by LT. Our data suggest that (a) LT is an autocrine growth factor for EBV-transformed lymphoblastoid B cell lines; and (b) anti-LT antibodies, soluble TNF/LT receptors, and TNF itself can suppress the growth of lymphoblastoid cells, probably by modulating or competing with LT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Lymphotoxin is an autocrine growth factor for Epstein-Barr virus-infected B cell lines. 838 56
An autoimmune mechanism in the pathogenesis of
myelodysplastic syndrome
(
MDS
) is suggested by response to immunosuppression, with CD8+ T-lymphocytes implicated in the haematopoietic suppression. We therefore sought evidence for human leucocyte antigen (HLA) restriction and variant frequency differences in selected polymorphisms at the loci for the immunomodulatory cytokines, tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha),
lymphotoxin-alpha
(
LT-alpha
) and interleukin 10 (IL-10) in patients with
MDS
and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) compared with normal controls. DNA from 150
MDS
/AML patients [24 AML, 53 refractory anaemia (RA), 25 RA with excess blasts (RAEB), four RAEB in transformation (RAEBt), 21 sideroblastic leukaemia, 22 chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia] was screened. Control data was from Scottish blood donors (HLA class I/II), healthy General Practitioner-based subjects (TNF-alpha/
LT-alpha
) and published values (IL-10). HLA class I/II haplotypes were determined using sequence-specific primers. Polymorphisms were assayed at TNF-alpha -308,
LT-alpha
+252 and IL10 -824, -597 and -1082 loci. Variant frequencies of common haplotypes at HLA class I and II, high-/low-producer TNF-alpha/
LT-alpha
and IL-10 loci were not different between patients and controls or within the French-American-British, International Prognostic Scoring System or cytogenetic subgroups and were not associated with altered survival for
MDS
/AML patients. TNF2 allele frequency was greater in the
MDS
/AML cohort (chi2 = 6.593, P < 0.05) but the biological significance was uncertain in the absence of an increased high-producer TNF-alpha/
LT-alpha
haplotype frequency. We can find no genetic influence for these polymorphisms in HLA class I/II, TNF-alpha/
LT-alpha
and IL-10 loci on either predisposition or disease progression in
MDS
/AML.
...
PMID:Allele and haplotype frequency at human leucocyte antigen class I/II and immunomodulatory cytokine loci in patients with myelodysplasia and acute myeloid leukaemia: in search of an autoimmune aetiology. 1202 20
Continuous human leukemia-lymphoma (LL) cell lines represent a rich resource of abundant, accessible and manipulable living cells contributing significantly to a better understanding of the pathophysiology of hematopoietic tumors. In particular, classical and molecular cytogenetics have benefitted enormously from the availability of LL cell lines with specific chromosomal abnormalities. Such aberrations may be the portal to the discovery of novel oncogene rearrangements for which positive cell lines provide a resource for both discovery and functional studies. The new continuous leukemia cell line MUTZ-11 was established in 1994 from the peripheral blood of a 60-year-old woman with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) M4 (following 2 years with
myelodysplastic syndromes
). DNA fingerprinting confirmed the authenticity and derivation of the cell line. The immunoprofile as determined by flow cytometry was as follows: positive for myelocytic markers (CD13, CD15, CD33, CD65 and CD68), negative for T-cell (except for CD4 and CD7), B-cell and erythroid-megakaryocytic markers. The cell line is constitutively cytokine-dependent and growth depends on externally added cytokines. With regard to cytokine receptor expression, the cell line was found to be positive for GM-CSFRalpha (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor, CD116), Kit (CD117) and IL-3Ralpha (interleukin-3 receptor, CD123). The cytokine response profiles as determined by [(3)H]-thymidine incorporation assay were: 2-to-12 fold growth stimulation of MUTZ-11 by GM-CSF, IFN-alpha (interferon), IFN-beta, IFN-gamma, IL-3 and SCF (stem cell factor); growth inhibition by TGF-beta1 (transforming growth factor), TNF-alpha (tumor necrosis factor) and
TNF-beta
. Cytogenetic analysis showed the following consensus karyotype: 46, XX, der(16)t(16;17)(p13.3;q23)x2. Previous molecular biological analysis documented that MUTZ-11 cells carry both an FLT3 internal tandem duplication (ITD) and an MLL partial tandem duplication (PTD). The scientific significance of MUTZ-11 lies (i). in the absolute cytokine-dependency and the proliferative response to various cytokines, (ii). in the unique cytogenetic (disomic t(16;17)) and (iii). molecular biological alterations (FLT3 ITD + MLL PTD). In summary, the new cytokine-dependent AML-derived cell line MUTZ-11 displays unique novel features and emphasizes the need for comprehensive analysis of new LL cell lines which may lead to the discovery of important pathogenetic alterations.
...
PMID:New cytokine-dependent acute myeloid leukemia cell line MUTZ-11 with disomic chromosome rearrangement t(16;17). 1506 4