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Query: UMLS:C0026986 (myelodysplastic syndrome)
14,926 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) may be accompanied by systemic mastocytosis. The mechanisms which play a role in the evolution of mastocytosis, however, are not well understood. We report on a case of refractory and anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS), and co-existing bone marrow mastocytosis. Compact mast cell (MC) infiltrates were detected in bone marrow sections by immunohistochemistry using an antibody to tryptase. In addition, the MC were found to express c-kit, the tyrosine kinase receptor for MGF (mast cell growth factor = stem cell factor, SCF). Activating point mutations in the kinase domain of c-kit (often found in mastocytosis) were not detectable. However, the mononuclear cells (MNC) of the bone marrow expressed mRNA specific for MITF, a transcription factor that regulates expression of c-kit and differentiation of MC. Surprisingly, the c-kit ligand SCF was found to augment expression of MITF mRNA in bone marrow MNC. Whether this augmentation represents a general response (preventing loss of growth factor receptor expression during cell maturation) common to all types of hemopoietic progenitors, or is confined to (some forms of) mastocytosis, remains unknown.
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PMID:Detection of mi transcription factor (MITF) mRNA in a case of myelodysplastic syndrome and bone marrow mastocytosis. 955 2

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are a heterogeneous group of disorders of hematopoiesis entailing hyperproliferative and ineffective hematopoiesis associated with morphologic evidence of marrow cell dysplasia resulting in refractory cytopenia(s), and an increased risk of transformation into acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML). The administration of colony-stimulating factor(s) (CSFs) to patients with MDS increased blood neutrophil concentrations, in most patients, and it was anticipated to be of benefit to prevent infections. The progression to AML while being treated with CSFs has come under close scrutiny. In vitro studies are expected to produce more pertinent criteria for selection of patients who are likely to benefit, as well as the overall benefits of various therapies. For this purpose, in vitro colony assays are an excellent approach for investigation of the biologic characteristics of MDS progenitor cells. The stem cell phenotype CD34 is the one of the best markers of progenitor cells, and can be used for the purification of these cells to unify levels of maturation; a direct comparison of proliferative and differentiative capacity of MDS progenitor cells with normal CD34+ cells can thus be made. The properties of MDS CD34+ cells are described here in association with proliferation and differentiation, with special emphasis on the role of stem cell factor (a ligand for c-kit) in leukemic type growth of MDS CD34+ cells.
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PMID:Growth characteristics of myelodysplastic CD34+ cells. 963 75

Early clinical trials of growth factor augmentation of induction chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia have yielded variable results. To test the hypothesis that this heterogeneity is a consequence of the pleiotropic effects of growth factors on leukemic cell biology, we measured the effects of in vivo interleukin 3 (IL-3) administration on leukemic cell proliferation and drug sensitivity. Thirty-four patients with acute myeloid leukemia with high-risk features or advanced myelodysplasia received IL-3 as a continuous infusion beginning 3 days prior to chemotherapy and continuing for the duration of intensive induction therapy. Bone marrow cells were studied prior to and after 3 days of IL-3 administration to assess changes in overall and leukemic progenitor cell [leukemia colony-forming unit (CFU-L)] proliferation, and progenitor cell sensitivity to 1-betad-arabinofuranosylcytosine. The median fold increase in overall leukemic cell proliferation in response to IL-3, assessed as expression of the nuclear antigen Ki67 in 28 patients, was 1.2. The median fold increase in percentage of cells in S phase (assessed in 29 patients) was 1.3. Despite the increase in overall cell proliferation in 70% of cases, CFU-L number increased in only 4 of 20 patients successfully studied (median day 4:day 1 ratio of CFU-L number, 0.6). While this suggests possible terminal differentiation of leukemic progenitor cells, expression of CD34, HLA-DR, c-kit, CD15, and CD14 were not consistently affected by the cytokine. 1-betad-Arabinofuranosylcytosine sensitivity of CFU-L increased significantly in 30% of cases, decreased in 30%, and was unchanged in 40%. Changes in overall cell proliferation (Ki67 expression) and CFU-L were independent predictors of change in 1-beta-d-arabinofuranosylcytosine sensitivity; increase in percentage of cells in S phase in response to IL-3 was correlated with attainment of complete remission. While these findings support the concept of cell cycle recruitment, IL-3 has marked pleiotropic effects on proliferation, differentiation, and survival of leukemic progenitors which make the clinical impact of in vivo cytokine administration for individual patients difficult to predict.
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PMID:Impact of in vivo administration of interleukin 3 on proliferation, differentiation, and chemosensitivity of acute myeloid leukemia. 981 85

We evaluated the effect of SCF on myeloid differentiation by correlating clonogenic potential (as CFU-GM), bone marrow (BM) plasma SCF levels and CD34/c-kit expression in 57 MDS samples. There was a significant correlation between low SCF levels and 'leukemic' in vitro growth, the number of clusters and the colony/cluster ratio. No correlation was found between BM plasma SCF levels, the pattern of growth and CD34+ c-kit+ expression. These data seem to exclude any direct effect of SCF on leukemogenesis, but suggest that low plasma SCF levels may be at least partially responsible for leukemic growth in MDS.
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PMID:Low plasma stem cell factor levels correlate with in vitro leukemic growth in myelodysplastic syndromes. 1007 Oct 80

The c-kit proto-oncogene encodes a 145 kd tyrosine kinase transmembrane receptor, which plays a key role in haemopoiesis. The c-kit has been classified as CD117 and is especially useful in the differential diagnosis of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). We analysed 104 consecutive cases (55 AML, 23 B-cell lineage ALL, three T-cell ALL, 11 blast crisis of chronic myeloproliferative disorders and 12 cases of myelodysplastic syndromes with more than 10% of blasts) referred to our Hospital for immunophenotypic diagnosis and compared the expression pattern of CD13, CD33 and CD117 using the same fluorochrome (phycoerythrin-PE). The recommendations of the EGIL group were followed in order to establish lineage involvement of the blastic population. The threshold used to assign positivity for CD117 was 10%. Bcr/abl, TEL/AML-1 and MLL rearrangements were assessed by molecular methods. CD117 expression was detected in 91% of AML and MDS. All the negative cases corresponded to acute monocytic leukemias. The calculated specificity for myeloid involvement was 0.86 for CD117, 0.36 for CD13 and 0.44 for CD33 (P < 0.005). CD117 was also positive in four cases of ALL. None of these cases showed bcr/abl or MLL rearrangements. In the light of these findings, CD117 expression should yield a higher score, at least one point, in the system currently applied for the diagnosis of biphenotypic acute leukemias (BAL) as its myeloid specificity is greater than that of CD13 and CD33. Moreover, its absence in AML could identify two subgroups of M5b cases. The coexpression of CD117 with cytoplasmic CD79a is often associated with CD7 reactivity, suggesting a stem cell disorder. CD117 should be included on a routine basis for the immunophenotypic diagnosis of acute leukemias.
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PMID:Enhanced myeloid specificity of CD117 compared with CD13 and CD33. 1022 19

Activating mutations in c-Kit, the receptor for Stem Cell Factor (SCF), have been identified in dysplasias and leukaemias of the mast cell lineage and have been shown to contribute to transformation in model systems. Early myeloid cells also normally express c-Kit and their survival, proliferation and differentiation is promoted by SCE It might therefore be expected that c-Kit mutations could also be involved in some acute and/or chronic myeloid leukaemias. We have found that mutant c-Kit (and normal c-Kit in the presence of SCF) provides a strong differentiation stimulus in normal and immortalised murine early myeloid cells. Since maturation of haemopoietic cells, with the exception of mast cells, results in down-regulation of c-Kit expression, the transforming effects of mutant receptor may be self-limiting in most lineages. This is consistent with the observation that multipotential progenitor cells from some patients with systemic mastocytosis express mutant c-Kit. However, c-Kit mutations have been observed in a few cases of myelodysplastic syndromes or AML without mast cell features. Oncogenesis involves multiple genetic changes and the phenotype of malignant haemopoietic cells expressing mutant c-Kit may be influenced by co-oncogenic events. For example mutations blocking the differentiative effect of mutant c-Kit might result in AML rather than mastocytosis. Thus the extent to which c-Kit mutations contribute to malignancies of early myeloid phenotype remains unknown, and resolution of this issue is complicated by the heterogeneity of this family of diseases.
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PMID:Effects of mutant c-Kit in early myeloid cells. 1072 93

Activating mutations in c-Kit, the receptor for Stem Cell Factor (SCF), have been identified in dysplasias and leukaemias of the mast cell lineage and have been shown to contribute to transformation in model systems. Early myeloid cells also normally express c-Kit and their survival, proliferation and differentiation is promoted by SCF. It might therefore be expected that c-Kit mutations could also be involved in some acute and/or chronic myeloid leukaemias. We have found that mutant c-Kit (and normal c-Kit in the presence of SCF) provides a strong differentiation stimulus in normal and immortalised murine early myeloid cells. Since maturation of haemopoietic cells, with the exception of mast cells, results in down-regulation of c-Kit expression, the transforming effects of mutant receptor may be self-limiting in most lineages. This is consistent with the observation that multipotential progenitor cells from some patients with systemic mastocytosis express mutant c-Kit. However, c-Kit mutations have been observed in a few cases of myelodysplastic syndromes or AML without mast cell features. Oncogenesis involves multiple genetic changes and the phenotype of malignant haemopoietic cells expressing mutant c-Kit may be influenced by co-oncogenic events. For example mutations blocking the differentiative effect of mutant c-Kit might result in AML rather than mastocytosis. Thus the extent to which c-Kit mutations contribute to malignancies of early myeloid phenotype remains unknown, and resolution of this issue is complicated by the heterogeneity of this family of diseases.
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PMID:Effects of mutant c-kit in early myeloid cells. 1049 68

Mastocytosis is characterized by abnormal infiltration of mast cells into various organs. An activating mutation in c-kit, involving an A --> T substitution at nucleotide 2648 has recently been described in some patients with mastocytosis. We describe a 12-year-old girl with this mutation in her bone marrow cells at diagnosis with a myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) without evidence of mastocytosis, and then in peripheral blood mononuclear cells 1 year later after the emergence of mastocytosis. The role of the c-Kit receptor and its ligand stem cell factor (SCF) in the pathogenesis of the disease was analysed in marrow cell clonogenic assays. We show that the genetic abnormalities in the patient resulted in factor-independent growth and hypersensitivity of primitive progenitors to SCF, with increased production of mast cells. Increased apoptosis and cluster formation, consistent with the myelodysplastic nature of the disorder, accompanied accumulation of abnormal cells with increasing concentrations of SCF.
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PMID:Mastocytosis cells bearing a c-kit activating point mutation are characterized by hypersensitivity to stem cell factor and increased apoptosis. 1079 76

The association of mast cell diseases and some hematologic malignancies, usually myeloproliferative disorders, myelodysplastic syndromes, and acute leukemia is well recognized. We report the case of a patient with telangiectasia macularis eruptiva perstans, a rare form of cutaneous mastocytosis, and multiple myeloma, an association that has been described only twice in the literature. Parallel improvement of both conditions was observed under chemotherapy regimens for multiple myeloma. Pathogenesis remains unclear, although the abnormalities in the c-kit pathway may play a role in the proliferation of cells from both lineages.
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PMID:Telangiectasia macularis eruptiva perstans and multiple myeloma. 1104 37

The first case of B-cell lymphoma of brain in a patient with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) was reported. A 68-year-old man was admitted because of anemia, fever, and thrombocytopenia and was diagnosed as having MDS (refractory anemia with excess of blasts) on the basis of the findings of bone marrow aspiration and chromosomal analysis. The patient was followed up without chemotherapy, but a brain tumor appeared after 3 years. Histologic and immunohistologic examinations revealed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. Mutations of the c-kit proto-oncogene (stem cell factor receptor) and the p53 tumor-suppressor gene were examined in the MDS lesion and malignant lymphoma (ML) by the polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformational polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) method followed by direct sequencing. The p53 mutation was not found in either MDS or ML, but a nonsense mutation (Try-557 --> stop) in exon 11 of the c-kit, which might lead to dysfunction of tyrosine kinase activity, was detected in MDS. This is the first report of c-kit mutation in MDS. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genome was demonstrated in the nucleus of brain ML cells by in situ hybridization with EBV-encoded RNA-1 probe. Immunohistochemistry showed that the tumor cells expressed latent infection gene products, including EBV nuclear antigen-2 and latent membrane protein-1. This pattern of latent gene expression was Lat III, which is usually found in malignant lymphomas developing in immunocompromised hosts. These findings suggest that a profound pancytopenia in MDS resulted in an immunodeficient condition, after which EBV-positive B-cell lymphoma of brain developed.
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PMID:Epstein-Barr virus associated B-cell lymphoma of brain developing in myelodysplastic syndrome with c-kit mutation (Try-557 -->stop). 1107 41


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