Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The human fetal bone marrow B cell compartment of 14- to 21-wk gestational age was examined phenotypically and with respect to Ig H chain commitment and diversity. A dramatic expansion of fetal marrow B cell pools at 16- to 18-wk gestational age characterizes a rapid and concerted chain of differentiation events. Transiently up to 1/4 of nucleated marrow cells are CD20+/CD21+ cells which begin to express surface Ig other than IgM. Limiting dilution analysis of EBV-infected marrow cells delineated a virtually exclusive commitment to IgM production until 15 wk and the absolute and relative number of these cells were small (approximately 5% of comparable adult values). In parallel to the rapid increase in total B cell pools size, cells committed and able to secrete any of the five Ig isotypes are generated by 16-wk gestational age and by 18 wk the frequencies of these cells rapidly reach levels typical for adult peripheral tissue such as blood or lymph node. Fetal L chain diversity always anticipated that observed in adult serum. In addition to rising pool sizes and diverse IgH expression, EBV transformability is a major variable during this period of B cell development with up to 2/3 of B lineage cells transformable, about half of which are pre-B cells. By 21-wk gestational age transformable pre-B cells have disappeared and (as in adult tissue) approximately 10 to 20% of CD20+ cells are transformable. The rapid, concerted expression of full H chain diversity during a narrow period in fetal development is unique to marrow and implies a lymphopoietic process in a privileged site rather than an immunologic differentiation event. During this event, the relative proportions between the different IgH classes expressed, resembled that found in adult tissue, perhaps suggesting that B cell inherent programming rather than only antigenic forces determine heavy chain choice. The staggered expression, early in postnatal life, of IgH regions 3' of the C mu locus may reflect regulatory functions rather than inherent immaturity of the B lineage.
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PMID:Concerted generation of Ig isotype diversity in human fetal bone marrow. 279 4

Three Hodgkin-derived cell lines (L428, L540, and CO) were studied for rearrangements and expression of immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor genes, and their genotype was compared to the phenotype. As far as the genotype is concerned, all 3 cell lines have characteristics of lymphoid cells; L428 of B, and L540 and CO of T-cell origin. L428 cells have one Ig heavy chain allele rearranged to C gamma and transcribed into RNA, while the second is deleted. Furthermore, L428 cells show an unusual immunoglobulin kappa light chain gene rearrangement involving deletion of the kappa constant gene in one allele, while the remaining kappa and lambda loci are in germline configuration. L540 and CO have, in contrast to L428 cells, the immunoglobulin genes in germline and T-cell receptor genes rearranged. The T-cell receptor beta and gamma genes are rearranged in both L540 and CO, whereas a rearrangement in the alpha locus was detected in L540 cells only. RNA of the size of functional beta chain transcripts was found in CO cells and of the size of functional alpha chain transcripts in L540 cells. All 3 cell lines are classified as immature lymphoid cells with respect to the limited expression of B- and T-cell antigens, respectively, and to the incomplete expression of their antigen receptor. The immaturity of lymphoid differentiation contrasts with the expression of activation antigens, i.e. Ki-1, Ki-24, HLA-DR, and IL-2 receptor. The immaturity of the cells excludes the possibility that the cells were activated along the physiological pathway, i.e. by interaction of the cell with antigen. The results obtained on the cell lines are in accordance with in vivo studies and suggest that Hodgkin and Sternberg-Reed cells are immature lymphoid cells which are activated by a still unknown mechanism.
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PMID:Phenotype versus immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor genotype of Hodgkin-derived cell lines: activation of immature lymphoid cells in Hodgkin's disease. 311 32

Radioimmunoassays were used to measure the total cellular content of mu, gamma, alpha, delta, kappa and lambda immunoglobulin chains in peripheral blood lymphocytes from normal adults, neonates and 11 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). Normal adult lymphocytes contained all classes of immunoglobulin, but predominantly IgG, associated with both types of light chain (kappa:lambda ratio 2:1). In contrast, mu was the major heavy chain in cells from 10 of the CLL patients, and the small amount of IgG found in CLL cells was not produced by the leukaemic clone. Approximately equimolar amounts of one type of light chain were also present, indicating monoclonality. The class distribution of the immunoglobulin in the neonatal cells was intermediate between that of CLL and normal adult cells. CLL B cells had substantially less surface IgM than normal but more cytoplasmic IgM. These data demonstrate the immaturity of neonatal B cells and suggest that CLL cells are also immature--at a stage not normally found in the adult circulation.
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PMID:Quantitation of immunoglobulin isotypes in chronic lymphocytic leukaemic cells compared with normal adult and neonatal lymphocytes. 398 Jan 9

IgG, IgA, and IgE production by newborn B cells is limited both in vivo and in vitro in various activation conditions, whereas IgM production is readily detectable. It has been suggested that the Ig heavy chain switch inability could be the consequence of T and B cell immaturity. As the interaction between CD40 (expressed on B cells) and its ligand CD40-L (expressed on activated T cells) triggers a key signal required for isotype switching, we studied the expression and function of these two components in normal fetuses, newborns, and infants, compared with adults. CD40-L expression was not inducible in 28 of 30 specimens of newborn cord-blood T cells following incubation with PMA and ionomycin, whereas activation markers such as CD69 were inducible. CD40-L expression was triggered by activation of T cells from infants > 3 wk of age. Surprisingly, T cells from 19- to 28-wk-old fetuses also expressed CD40-L following activation. CD40-L expression on newborn T lymphocytes was induced on T cell lines generated in the presence of PHA and maintained with IL-2 following further stimulation with PMA and ionomycin. CD40-L mRNA transcripts and intracytoplasmic protein expression following activation of newborn T cells were strongly decreased, leading to undetectable protein membrane detection. These results point to a possible transcriptional down-regulation of CD40-L expression by neonatal T lymphocytes. In addition, fetal and cord-blood B cells were poorly able to switch to IgG or IgA by stimulation with CD40 agonists (Ab or soluble CD40-L) in the presence of IL-4 or IL-10 as also detected with surface IgD+ adult B cells. Both phenomena could contribute to the neonatal Ig switch inability, although distinct underlying regulatory mechanisms are probably involved, as suggested by different in vivo time courses.
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PMID:Undetectable CD40 ligand expression on T cells and low B cell responses to CD40 binding agonists in human newborns. 753 Jul 39

The mean distribution of lengths in the third complementarity-determining region of the heavy chain (HCDR3) serves as a measure of the development of the antibody repertoire during ontogeny. To determine the timing and pattern of HCDR3 length maturation during the third trimester of pregnancy, the mean distribution of HCDR3 lengths among variable-diversity-joining-constant-mu (VDJC(mu)) transcripts from the cord blood was analyzed from 138 infants of 23 to 40 weeks' gestation, including 3 sets of twins, 2 of which were of dizygotic origin. HCDR3 maturation begins at the start of the third trimester; follows a slow, continuous expansion over a 5-month period; and is unaffected by race or sex. The range and mean distribution of lengths may vary in dizygotic twins, indicating individual rates of development. The mean HCDR3 length distribution in 10 premature infants with documented bacterial sepsis was then followed for 2 to 12 weeks after their first positive blood culture. HCDR3 spectrotype analysis demonstrated oligoclonal B-cell activation and expansion after sepsis, but maturation of the repertoire was not accelerated even by the systemic exposure to external antigen represented by bacteremia. Antibody repertoire development appears to be endogenously controlled and adheres to an individualized developmental progression that probably contributes to the relative immaturity of the neonatal immune response.
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PMID:Slow, programmed maturation of the immunoglobulin HCDR3 repertoire during the third trimester of fetal life. 1167 47

Primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas are a heterogeneous group of lymphoid neoplasms primarily occurring in the skin. Although most cases are represented by primary cutaneous follicle center cell lymphoma, primary cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma and leg-type diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, other diffuse large B-cell lymphomas and B-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma may rarely present primarily in the skin. In this setting, the presence of histopathologic and immunohistochemical features of cellular immaturity is exceedingly rare and may represent a diagnostic challenge. We present the first case of a primary cutaneous diffuse large B-cell lymphoma characterized by diminished expression of CD45, expression of TdT and rearrangement of MYC gene. The differential diagnosis mainly included B-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma, and required the genetic analysis of heavy chain (IGH) gene rearrangements.
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PMID:A case of primary cutaneous B-cell lymphoma with immature features in an old man. Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with immature features or B-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma? 3262 64