Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0079731 (B-cell lymphoma)
16,671 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Several lines of investigation point to a new herpesvirus, human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8), as the cause of two different neoplasms seen in AIDS patients-Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) and body cavity B cell lymphoma. If this virus is the etiological agent, rather than another opportunistic infectious agent, it should be present in the earliest detectable clinical lesions on a temporal basis, and localize to specific target cells in a spatial pattern consistent with tumorigenic pathways. In this study, we take advantage of the clinical accessibility to biopsy early (patch stage) skin lesions of KS to address the temporal issue, combined with in situ PCR and dual immunostaining using a marker identifying malignant cells, to address the spatial localization issue. 21 different tissue samples were subjected to PCR analysis and in situ PCR with and without simultaneous immunostaining. In normal skin from healthy individuals, no HHV-8 DNA was detected by PCR or in situ PCR. However, in all PCR-positive tissues, distinct and specific in situ PCR staining was observed. In four different patch stage KS lesions, in situ PCR staining localized to nuclei of endothelial cells and perivascular spindle-shaped tumor cells. Later stage KS lesions (plaques and nodules) revealed additional positive cells, including epidermal keratinocytes (four of five), and eccrine epithelia (two of four). These patterns were nonrestricted to skin, as pulmonary KS also revealed HHV-8-specific infection of endothelial cells and KS tumor cells, as well as epithelioid pneumocytes (two of two). In body cavity B cell lymphoma by dual staining, HHV-8 was present in malignant tumor cells (EMA immunostained positive) and not in reactive lymphocytes. These results reveal an early temporal onset and nonrandom tissue and cellular distribution pattern for HHV-8 infection that is consistent with a causal link between this DNA virus and two AIDS-related neoplasms.
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PMID:In situ polymerase chain reaction-based localization studies support role of human herpesvirus-8 as the cause of two AIDS-related neoplasms: Kaposi's sarcoma and body cavity lymphoma. 918 21

A 77-year-old man was admitted because of massive pericardial effusion and cardiac tumor. Cytological examination of the effusion and histological examination of a subcutaneous tumor in the chest wall revealed diffuse large B cell lymphoma. The immunophenotype of tumor cells was CD5+ CD20+ CD22+ CD38+ HLA-DR+ CD19-. Chromosome analysis revealed complex abnormal karyotypes containing t(8;14) (q24;q32). C-myc gene rearrangement was shown by Southern blotting. Chemotherapy with pirarubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristin, and prednisolone (THP-COP) was not effective for his lymphoma. He suffered from cardiac tamponade and died at 5 months after diagnosis. Autopsy revealed a large cardiac tumor, extensive epicardial infiltration, tiny tumors in the lung and pancreas, but no lymphadenopathy, the combination of which suggested a primary cardiac lymphoma. Immunohistochemistry for p53 protein showed nuclear staining of more than 50% of the lymphoma cells. In situ hybridization for EBER-1 was negative. Rearrangement of c-myc gene and overexpression of p53 protein are usually observed in Burkitt's lymphoma and some cases of high grade lymphomas including AIDS-associated non-Hodgkin lymphomas. In this case the association of these molecular findings and resistance to chemotherapy is suggested.
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PMID:[Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma mainly involving the heart and showing t(8;14) (q24;q32) with c-myc rearrangement]. 936 67

A 34-month-old black boy who had contracted acquired immunodeficiency syndrome from his mother presented with fever, vomiting, and cough. He was cachectic, hypertonic, and developmentally delayed. A brain computed tomography scan revealed masses in the left frontal horn, subependymal, and periventricular regions; secondary edema; and hydrocephalus. The differential diagnosis was cerebral lymphoma versus toxoplasmosis. The patient had disseminated Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare infection, lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis, as well as Pseudomonas and Klebsiella pneumonia. He died of respiratory insufficiency 53 days after admission. The autopsy confirmed a primary cerebral B-cell lymphoma, large cell type, which was positive for Epstein-Barr virus, latent phase, by in situ hybridization. Primary central nervous system lymphomas are rare in children, in contrast to adults. To our knowledge, only five well-documented cases of primary cerebral lymphomas in infants and children with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome have been reported previously. The current study shows that these childhood lymphomas are associated with and presumably caused by Epstein-Barr virus and thus have a pathogenesis similar to that of primary central nervous system lymphomas in adults.
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PMID:Epstein-Barr virus-associated primary central nervous system lymphoma in a child with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A case report and review of the literature. 943 21

We report a rare case of a primary intracranial B cell lymphoma originating in the internal auditory canal. The clinical manifestations were indistinguishable from those of other, more common tumors of the same region. We achieved total gross tumor removal with preservation of the facial nerve. A detailed histologic examination and a systemic workup confirmed the primary nature of this tumor. To our knowledge, this is the second case reported in the literature of a primary malignant lymphoma originating in the internal auditory canal. This is the first instance that includes immunohistochemical and cytometric studies of fresh tissue. We discuss the management of primary lymphomas of the central nervous system, with special emphasis on their association with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and other immune system diseases. Awareness of primary central nervous system lymphomas is important, since a greater occurrence of these rare tumors in the cerebellopontine angle is probable in the future.
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PMID:Primary lymphoma of the internal auditory canal. Case report and review of the literature. 943 83

The EBV plays a major role in the development of lymphoproliferative disorders in immunosuppressed patients. After organ transplantation most of lymphoproliferative disorders associated with EBV are polymorphic, with various expression of clonality. The pattern of EBV latency genes expression is rather the same as in lymphoblastoid cells lines and the EBV infected cells strongly expressed activation and adhesion molecules in most cases. In AIDS-related lymphomas the frequency of EBV as well as the expression of latency genes are related to the localization and to the histological subtypes. While EBV is observed in 30 to 50% of cases of Burkitt's lymphomas occurring the early stage of AIDS, its association in primary brain lymphomas and immunoblastic lymphomas developed in the late stage is observed in nearly all cases as well as in Hodgkin's disease. In primary brain lymphomas, the high expression of LMP-1 protein is correlated to the expression of BCL2 oncoprotein suggesting a transactivation of bcl2 by LMP-1 as it was reported in vitro. In non overt immunosuppressed patients the role of EBV is less clearly established, particularly in Burkitt's lymphoma where EBV is now considered as a cofactor. In B-cell lymphoma EBV is detected in about 5% of cases except in peculiar situations such as in lymphoma occurring in pleural cavity after longstanding pleural chronic inflammation and in Richter's syndrome with Reed-Sternberg-like cells. In peripheral T-cell lymphomas, EBV is observed in about 25% of cases, but its frequency varies with the histology and the localisation. EBV is present in nearly all cases of angio-immunoblastic type and in the nasal lymphoid proliferations developed from the NK cells. Detected in 30 to 80% in the Reed-Sternberg cells of Hodgkin's disease cases, the pathogenic significance of EBV remains to be determined in this disease.
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PMID:[Role of Epstein-Barr Virus in lymphoproliferative disorders]. 945 45

Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) are common consequences of HIV infection. These tumours appear to be precipitated by herpesviruses. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is implicated as a cause of up to 50% of systemic NHLs and up to 100% of central nervous system lymphomas in patients with AIDS. KS may be a consequence of the newly identified gamma-herpesvirus KSHV (KS-associated herpesvirus or HHV-8). This herpesvirus is found in all KS biopsies from different epidemiologic forms of this disease. KSHV is also implicated in the pathogenesis of a rare form of B cell lymphoma called body-cavity based lymphoma or primary effusion lymphoma (PEL).
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PMID:Etiology of AIDS-related Kaposi's sarcoma and lymphoma. 945 74

Dendritic cells (DC) are potent antigen-presenting cells (APC) capable of inducing strong T-cell-mediated immunity. Infusion of lymphoma-specific antigen-loaded autologous DC has been demonstrated to result in the generation of antigen-specific immunity and reduction in tumor burden in B-cell lymphoma patients. Cellular immunotherapy employing antigen-loaded DC could have a potential therapeutic impact in tumors and viral infections, including HIV infection. However, DC in HIV-infected individuals and breast cancer patients are believed to be functionally defective. Therefore, the potential of using allogeneic DC offers significant implications for DC immunotherapy in AIDS and immunocompromised cancer patients. To explore the potential of allogeneic DC therapy in vivo, we tested the ability of allogeneic DC to generate primary peptide-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses in vitro. Our results indicate that DC from HLA class I-matched individuals elicit primary immune responses in vitro using viral peptides as naive antigens. A primary peptide-specific immune response could also be detected even when only one HLA allele (HLA-A*0201) was matched between the allogeneic DC and T-lymphocytes. The ability to generate primary peptide-specific responses in vitro is strongly indicative of the in vivo therapeutic potential of allogeneic DC.
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PMID:Generation of primary peptide-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocytes in vitro using allogeneic dendritic cells. 948 58

In genetically susceptible C57BL/6 mice the LP-BM5 isolate of murine retroviruses causes profound splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, hypergammaglobulinemia, and an immunodeficiency syndrome bearing many similarities to the pathologies seen in AIDS. Because of these similarities, which also include terminal B cell lymphoma formation, this syndrome has been called murine AIDS or MAIDS. Prompted by previous reports showing that the onset of MAIDS is dependent on the presence of both CD4+ T and B cells, we have previously shown that anti-gp39/CD40 ligand mAb (anti-CD40L mAb) treatment of LP-BM5-infected mice is effective in inhibiting the induction of MAIDS when a short course of anti-CD40L mAb treatment was started on the same day as LP-BM5 administration. The success of anti-CD40L mAb therapy, as indicated by a much reduced degree of splenomegaly, hypergammaglobulinemia, and mitogen and allogeneic CTL unresponsiveness, demonstrated that CD40L/CD40 interactions were critical to the establishment of MAIDS. Here we extend these findings through the use of delayed anti-CD40L mAb treatment of mice, beginning 3-4 weeks after LP-BM5 infection, by showing that interruption of CD40L/CD40 interactions also interferes with the progression of MAIDS. About 60% of LP-BM5-preinfected mice were affected by delayed anti-CD40L mAb treatment, with substantially reduced spleen weights and serum hypergammaglobulinemia and normal or greatly restored proliferative responses to Con A stimulation and CTL responses to allogeneic stimulation. The other LP-BM5-infected mice that did not respond to anti-CD40L therapy were found to have made antibodies to the anti-CD40L mAb. Thus, in a majority of mice anti-CD40L mAb therapy was very effective in interfering with MAIDS pathogenesis well after the establishment of the virus infection and MAIDS symptomatology, indicating that CD40L/CD40 interactions are crucial to the maintenance and progression of the disease, as well as its initiation.
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PMID:Evidence for a continued requirement for CD40/CD40 ligand (CD154) interactions in the progression of LP-BM5 retrovirus-induced murine AIDS. 949

Murine acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (MAIDS) can be viewed as a lymphoproliferative disease which involves B cells as well as T cells from spleen and lymph nodes while thymus and Peyer's patches do not participate in the process. The 120-kDa protooncogene product c-Cbl was initially cloned from the murine Cas NS-1 B cell lymphoma. It is a main target of immunoreceptor (TCR and BCR)-mediated protein tyrosine kinase activity. Moreover, recent data suggest that c-Cbl might play a crucial role in the regulation of cell proliferation through regulation of GTP-binding proteins. Therefore, the involvement of c-Cbl was evaluated in the lymphoproliferative disease induced by the MAIDS virus. The expression of the c-Cbl protein was dramatically reduced in the lymph node of infected mice while it remained normal in the thymus. In contrast, the expression of actin, TCR-zeta chain, ZAP-70, and p59(fyn) remained similar in controls and infected mice. Identical results were obtained with sorted B cells and T cells. Surprisingly, a B cell lymphoma line derived from late stage MAIDS mice displayed a normal level of c-Cbl.
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PMID:Decreased protein levels of the c-Cbl protooncogene in murine AIDS. 975 45

The DNA sequence for Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus was originally detected in Kaposi's sarcoma biopsy specimens. Since its discovery, it has been possible to detect virus in cell lines established from AIDS-associated body cavity-based B-cell lymphoma and to propagate virus from primary Kaposi's sarcoma lesions in a human renal embryonic cell line, 293. In this study, we analyzed the infectivity of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus produced from these two sources. Viral isolates from cultured cutaneous primary KS cells was transmitted to an Epstein-Barr virus-negative Burkitt's B-lymphoma cell line, Louckes, and compared to virus induced from a body cavity-based B-cell lymphoma cell line. While propagation of body cavity-based B-cell lymphoma-derived virus was not observed in 293 cell cultures, infection with viral isolates obtained from primary Kaposi's sarcoma lesions induced injury in 293 cells typical of herpesvirus infection and was associated with apoptotic cell death. Interestingly, transient overexpression of the Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus v-Bcl-2 homolog delayed the process of apoptosis and prolonged the survival of infected 293 cells. In contrast, the broad-spectrum caspase inhibitors Z-VAD-fmk and Z-DEVD-fmk failed to protect infected cell cultures, suggesting that Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus-induced apoptosis occurs through a Bcl-2-dependent pathway. Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus isolates from primary Kaposi's sarcoma lesions and body cavity-based lymphomas therefore may differ and are likely to have distinct contributions to the pathophysiology of Kaposi's sarcoma.
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PMID:Distinct biology of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus from primary lesions and body cavity lymphomas. 981 47


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