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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We phenotyped blood and bone marrow cells from a patient with acute Ph1+ acute leukemia longitudinally during the four months he received intensive chemotherapy. At presentation this case of biphenotypic acute leukemia had two immunologically different types of blast cells, one expressed
CD10
(
CALLA
), CD13 (MY7) and CD33 (MY9) but lacked CD20 (B1), the other type expressed no
CD10
or CD33. The phenotype, during AML induction therapy, changed to a more CD10+, CD20+ ALL one. ALL therapy based on these findings induced improvement in bone marrow function but the patient died of
septicemia
at day 134. The use of concomitant immunophenotyping (IP) and cell cycle analysis had shown proliferation advantage of the more lymphoid malignant cells. These results suggest that it is possible to induce lineage-associated changes in the phenotype of hybrid malignant cells and that these leukemias might be treated best according to longitudinal immunophenotyping of the blast cells.
...
PMID:Hybrid acute leukemia: therapeutical implications of immunological phenotyping. 155 Jul 96
Pseudomonas aeruginosa alkaline proteinase, which is a zinc-dependent bacterial
endopeptidase
, preferentially hydrolyzed Boc-Val-Leu-Lys-methylcoumarylamide (MCA) which was originally designed as a specific substrate of plasmin, a plasma serine proteinase. The hydrolytic capacity was resistant to tosyl-lysine chloromethylketone at a concentration as high as 1 mM, but was blocked by a treatment with metal chelator such as o-phenanthroline at the concentration of 5 mM. Kinetic parameters of the amidolytic reaction were Km = 21 microM, kcat = 0.067 s-1 and kcat/Km = 3190 M-1 s-1. A synthetic peptide inhibitor which bore a possible ligand for zinc atom at the carboxy terminal was designed. This inhibitor, Ac-Val-Leu-Lys-4-mercaptoanilide, blocked the amidolytic activity of the pseudomonal alkaline proteinase in a competitive manner with the dissociation constant (Ki) value of 24 microM. The results imply that P. aeruginosa alkaline proteinase must be an unusual zinc-dependent 'C (COOH)-type'
endopeptidase
, which hydrolyzes the peptide bond of certain amino acid residues at the carboxyl group side by specific recognition, like serine- and cysteine-proteinases. In comparison, P. aeruginosa elastase which is a typical 'N (NH2)-type' metalloproteinase did not hydrolyze all of the commercially available peptide-MCA substrates tested at the present study. P. aeruginosa alkaline proteinase also hydrolyzed natural substrates of plasmin, such as fibrin and fibrinogen, with similar specific activities to plasmin. The susceptible subunits of fibrinogen were the A-alpha and B-beta ones, in this order. P. aeruginosa alkaline proteinase also exhibited an anti-coagulant activity in human plasma attributed to the direct fibrinogenolytic function. Such potential anti-coagulant capacity of the P. aeruginosa alkaline proteinase might explain, at least partly, the most characteristic pathologic feature of the P. aeruginosa
septicemia
, hemorrhagic lesions with lacking thrombi (Fetzer, A.E. et al. (1967) Am. Rev. Respirat. Dis. 96, 1121-1130).
...
PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa alkaline proteinase might share a biological function with plasmin. 182 96
Fifty-four patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL: 1 relapse, 21 high risk first complete remission (CR 1), 29 second CR (CR 2), and 3 third CR (CR 3) were treated by autologous bone marrow transplantation at three centers. Before storage, the marrows were purged ex vivo with appropriate MAbs RFAL3 (
CD10
), SB4 (CD19), and RFT2 (CD7), with rabbit serum as the source of complement. All patients received total body irradiation either 750 cGy (middose 15 cGy/min) as a single fraction or 6 x 200 cGy over 3 days (midline dose 16 cGy/min) with lung shielding from 1,100 cGy. The patients who received 750 cGy also received cyclophosphamide or the same drug combined with ara-C or prednisone, teniposide, vincristine, ara-C, and dauno-rubicin. Patients receiving 200 cGy x 6 also received either cyclophosphamide, melphalan, or ara-C and cyclophosphamide. Three patients died of post transplantation complications (interstitial pneumonia, hepatitis B liver necrosis, or encephalitis). This gives a procedure related mortality of 5%. Nonfatal complications were 10 cases of
septicemia
, 4 interstitial pneumonia, 2 interstitial nephritis, 1 veno-occlusive disease (VOD), and 1 case of hemolytic uremic syndrome. The patient autografted in relapse died of relapse within 2 months. In CR 1 6 or 21 patients have had a relapse, and the actuarial leukemia free survival from CR is 65% (median follow-up 16 months). In CR 2-3 18 of 32 patients have relapsed, and the actuarial leukemia free survival is 31% (median follow-up 18.5 months) from CR. Twelve patients have achieved an inversion, (i.e., present CR longer than previous CR), with a further seven with the potential to achieve inversion. We conclude that ABMT in high risk ALL has a low procedure related mortality (5%), and there are few other complications. The in vitro purging with MAbs had no adverse effect on bone marrow reconstitution, but this study was not designed to demonstrate its antileukemic efficacy. The actuarial leukemia free survival time in the present study for patients with high risk CR 1 and the inversions in CF 2-3 are promising and indicate a potential beneficial effect of ABMT.
...
PMID:Autologous bone marrow transplantation with monoclonal antibody purged marrow for high risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 266 54
Two murine monoclonal antibodies, FMC-8 and WM-21, reactive with the human leucocyte differentiation antigens CD-9 (p-24) and CD-10 (
CALLA
), respectively, have been used for purging leukemic cells from remission bone marrow. Nine patients with the common variant of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (c-ALL) in second or subsequent remission underwent bone marrow harvesting. Bone marrow mononuclear cells underwent lytic incubation in vitro with antibodies FMC-8 and WM-21, and rabbit serum as a source of complement, and were then cryopreserved. A mean of 0.90 +/- 0.50 x 10(8) nucleated cells per kilogram of recipient body weight remained after treatment, with 0.38 +/- 0.24 x 10(8) nucleated cells and 8.3 +/- 10.3 x 10(4) CFUGM per kg being recovered on thawing. Seven patients subsequently received marrow-ablative treatment with high dose cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg) and fractionated total body irradiation (12 Gy), followed by infusion of antibody-purged autologous bone marrow. Three deaths due to
sepsis
occurred within the first 35 days, compounded in one patient by poor marrow engraftment. All other patients engrafted promptly, and four remain in continuous complete remission at 2, 6, 9, and 28 months after transplantation. The procedure carries a substantial risk of early toxicity, but offers a significant chance of prolonged unmaintained remission to selected patients with poor prognosis acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
...
PMID:Transplantation of monoclonal antibody-purged autologous bone marrow for treatment of poor risk common acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 296 Mar 7
The object of this study was to evaluate the treatment outcome in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in Chennai. The problems inherent in a developing country which affect outcome are analyzed. The importance of prognostic factors especially immunotyping is assessed. The period of study was from June 1991 to December 1995. A total of 135 children were studied. Pre B
CALLA
positive (
CD10
, CD19, HLA, DR) was the dominant immunotype in 75 children (69 per cent). T-cell ALL was seen in 15 (14 per cent), biphenotype in three (2 per cent), and B in one (0.9 per cent). Seventy children (53 per cent) were treated with a high risk protocol, 25 (17 per cent) received an intermediate risk, and 40 patients (30 per cent) received a standard risk protocol. Analyzing the outcome in 135 children, 34 (27 per cent) had event free survival (EFS) at the time of analysis; of these 41 per cent had EFS after 2 years of therapy, 31 per cent after 3 years and 18.7 per cent after 4 years (i.e. 1 year after stopping 3 years of therapy). Fifty-seven children (41 per cent) dropped out; 25 (18 per cent) died due to
sepsis
. Treatment obstacles included delay in diagnosis, poor health education and facilities, poor supportive care, and socio-economic problems.
...
PMID:Survival of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: experience in Chennai. 1066 9
Primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (PCBLs) may have particular clinicopathologic characteristics distinct from their lymph node-based counterparts. It has been suggested that PCBLs should have a separate classification system. The aim of this study was to determine whether the Revised European-American Lymphoid Neoplasms (REAL) classification is applicable to PCBL. Thirty-nine cases of PCBL from 36 patients, consisting of 20 men and 16 women (median age 66 yrs), were included in this study. Paraffin-section immunohistochemistry for CD3, CD5,
CD10
, CD20, CD43, Bcl-2, Bcl-6, and cyclin D1 was performed in all cases. Immunostaining for immunoglobulin light chains was also performed on cases histologically diagnosed as extranodal marginal zone lymphoma (MZL) and primary cutaneous B-cell lymphoma unclassifiable (PCBLu). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of t(14;18) was performed in all cases. Immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement (VDJ) was tested by PCR on all follicle center lymphoma (FCL), MZL, and PCBLu cases. The 39 cases consisted of 15 (39%) FCLs, 13 (33%) diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLCL), 9 (23%) extranodal MZL, and 2 cases of PCBLu. Anatomically, 59% of PCBLs occurred in the head and neck, of which approximately 57% were FCL. Five of six cases presenting on the lower extremity were DLCL. Follow-up data was available from all 39 patients with a mean of 50.8 months. All but two patients are alive with or without disease at last contact. One patient with DLCL died of lung metastases and the other DLCL patient died of
sepsis
as a complication of therapy. In all 15 cases of FCL,
CD10
and/or Bcl-6 expression supported the follicle center origin of the neoplastic cells. In contrast to previous reports, we found that 53% (8 of 15) of primary cutaneous FCL had either Bcl-2 protein expression or t(14;18). Our data indicate that many cases of primary cutaneous FCL have Bcl-2 alterations similar to their nodal counterpart. We found that 95% (37 of 39) of PCBLs could be classified according to the REAL classification, supporting its applicability in cutaneous lymphomas.
...
PMID:Clinicopathologic reassessment of primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas with immunophenotypic and molecular genetic characterization. 1125 30
CD10
, also known as
neutral endopeptidase
or
CALLA
, is a major metalloproteinase that regulates levels of biologically active peptides that initiate inflammatory, cardiovascular, and neurogenic responses. Relative tissue expression levels of
CD10
, its peptide substrates, and their receptors constitute the basic regulatory mechanism. Neutrophils contain abundant
CD10
and are rapid responders to an inflammatory septic challenge. Expression of neutrophil surface antigens in response to inflammation was studied in the primate model of Escherichia coli-mediated
sepsis
and in human volunteers injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). There was a rapid and profound (up to 95%) reduced baboon neutrophil
CD10
expression in response to E. coli injections of 5.71 x 106 CFU/kg to 2.45 x 109 CFU/kg that gradually resolved to preinjection levels. The reduction was both dose and time dependent. Reduced
CD10
antigen on mature baboon neutrophils and bands was observed by immunohistochemistry. Human volunteers challenged with 4ng/kg LPS experienced transient chills, nausea, fever, and myalgia. Up to approximately 20% of their neutrophils had reduced
CD10
expression, peaking at 2 to 8 h after injection. By 24 h, neutrophil
CD10
expression resolved to preinjection levels. In contrast, in both the baboon and human studies, other neutrophil surface antigens were only slightly decreased (CD11a) or increased (CD11b, CD18, CD35, CD66b, and CD63). These data present the novel observation that neutrophil
CD10
expression decreases significantly in response to in vivo inflammatory challenge. This decrease appears to be unique to
CD10
and may contribute to a reduced regulation of bioactive peptides released in response to inflammatory challenge.
...
PMID:Reduced neutrophil CD10 expression in nonhuman primates and humans after in vivo challenge with E. coli or lipopolysaccharide. 1286 56
Adrenomedullin (ADM), a multifunction peptide with important roles in regulating cardiovascular homeostasis, has the vasodilatory properties and is of particular interest in the pathophysiology of
sepsis
. ADM levels in plasma and tissues are regulated by the proteolysis of
neutral endopeptidase
(
NEP
), the major enzyme of ADM degradation. We observed the
NEP
activity in the plasma, the activity and distribution of
NEP
and its mRNA expression in the tissues of rats in septic shock to study the possible role of
NEP
in elevating tissue ADM concentration during
sepsis
. ADM level increases progressively during
sepsis
except in the jejunum. Rats in early phase of shock (ES) showed diverse changes in tissue
NEP
activity. Plasma
NEP
activity, tissue
NEP
activity and its protein and mRNA expression in the left ventricle, aorta, jejunum and lung in the late phase of shock (LS) rats were lower than those in ES and the control, but no statistical change of
NEP
activity in the kidney was observed. The level of ADM was inversely correlated with
NEP
activity in the plasma, ventricle and aorta and positively correlated with
NEP
activity in the jejunum. Thus, in
sepsis
, the local concentration and action of ADM in tissues may be differentially regulated by
NEP
.
...
PMID:Relationship between contents of adrenomedullin and distributions of neutral endopeptidase in blood and tissues of rats in septic shock. 1500 37
A 51-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with tonsillar swelling. After tonsillectomy was performed, she was diagnosed as having CD56-positive T-cell lymphoma, mainly composed of small and medium-sized atypical cells. An immunohistochemical study showed that the malignant lymphocytes were positive for CD3, CD8, CD56, TIA-1 and granzyme B, while negative for CD20, CD5 and
CD10
. Flowcytometry demonstrated the lymphocytes were positive for CD56. Southern blot analysis revealed a rearrangement of the T-cell receptor gamma chain. The disease stage by Ann Arbor staging classification was II B. We provided MCEC therapy followed by autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation, and complete remission (CR) was achieved. Two months after CR, however, the patient relapsed with peritonitis due to perforation of an ileal tumor, and died of
sepsis
. It is rare for CD56-positive T-cell lymphoma to occur primarily in the tonsils. Because small bowel ulcers were revealed during the course of induction chemotherapy, we report a valuable case in which suspected CD56-positive enteropathy-type T-cell lymphoma (ETL) occurred primarily in the tonsils.
...
PMID:[CD56-positive peripheral T-cell lymphoma primarily presenting with tonsillar swelling]. 1555 48
Tripeptidyl-peptidase II is a high-molecular weight peptidase with a widespread distribution in eukaryotic cells. The enzyme sequentially removes tripeptides from a free N-terminus of longer peptides and also displays a low
endopeptidase
activity. A role for tripeptidyl-peptidase II in the formation of peptides for antigen presentation has recently become evident, and the enzyme also appears to be important for the degradation of some specific substrates, e.g. the neuropeptide cholecystokinin. However, it is likely that the main biological function of tripeptidyl-peptidase II is to participate in a general intracellular protein turnover. This peptidase may act on oligopeptides generated by the proteasome, or other endopeptidases, and the tripeptides formed would subsequently be good substrates for other exopeptidases. The fact that tripeptidyl-peptidase II activity is increased in
sepsis
-induced muscle wasting, a situation of enhanced protein turnover, corroborates this biological role.
...
PMID:Tripeptidyl-peptidase II: a multi-purpose peptidase. 1612 7
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