Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0079731 (
B-cell lymphoma
)
16,671
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Over 50 B-cell derived lines and
B-cell lymphoma
and leukemia biopsies were screened for expression of the
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) receptor. The 13 sIgM-positive lines bound more than five times as much virus as the six IgG lines. Among the biopsies, the 17 sIgM, 11 sIgM and sIgD, and seven sIgG expressing biopsies were further divided according to expression of the C3 receptor. C3 receptor-positive biopsies, which expressed sIgM alone or along with sIgD, had the largest subpopulation of cells which expressed the EBV receptor (EBVR). C3 receptor-negative biopsies only expressed the EBVR on half as many cells as their C3 receptor-positive counterparts. However, the relative number of EBVR on individual EBVR-positive cells was independent of C3 receptor expression. Within the sIgG class, both C3 receptor-negative and positive cells expressed equally low levels of EBVR, both in terms of subpopulation and relative number of EBVR per positive cell. These results suggest that subpopulation expression of the EBV receptor is related to the C3 receptor but that relative number of receptors per cell is associated with sIg phenotype.
...
PMID:Quantitative comparison of Epstein-Barr virus receptor expression on sIgM and sIgG cell lines and B-cell lymphoma biopsies. 629 Mar 3
Nineteen renal allograft recipients developed B-cell lymphoproliferative diseases. Clinically there were two groups: a) young patients (mean age, 23 years) who presented soon (mean, 9 months) after transplantation or antirejection therapy with fever, pharyngitis, and lymphadenopathy resembling infectious mononucleosis, and b) older patients (mean age, 48 years) who presented later (mean, 6 years) after transplantation with localized tumor masses. Histologically, the diseases were classified as polymorphic diffuse B-cell hyperplasia (PDBH) or polymorphic
B-cell lymphoma
(PBL). Immunologic cell typing revealed either polyclonal or monoclonal B-cell proliferations. Malignant transformation of polyclonal proliferations in two patients was suggested by the finding of clonal cytogenetic abnormalities.
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) specific serology, staining of biopsy specimens for the
Epstein
-Barr nuclear antigen, and EBV DNA molecular hybridization studies implicated EBV as the cause of both PDBH and PBL. Acyclovir, an antiviral agent that blocks EBV replication in vitro, inhibited oropharyngeal shedding of EBV and caused complete remission in four patients with polyclonal B-cell proliferations. The monoclonal tumors were acyclovir resistant. We suggest that surgical treatment, radiotherapy, or chemotherapy may be more appropriate therapy in selected patients with acyclovir resistant tumors. Therapeutic decisions require not only documentation of the viral etiology of these tumors, but also immunologic and cytogenetic analysis to determine the stage of tumor evolution in individual patients.
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) induced polyclonal and monoclonal B-cell lymphoproliferative diseases occurring after renal transplantation. Clinical, pathologic, and virologic findings and implications for therapy. 631 Nov 21
Cloned fragments of the
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) genome were used to examine tissues from 145 patients for the presence of EBV DNA by two techniques: (1) nucleic acid hybridization of cell spots from which the DNA had been extracted in situ and (2) hybridization of DNA that had been transferred to nitrocellulose by Southern blotting. EBV DNA was found in tissues from four adults and five children with American Burkitt's lymphoma, infectious mononucleosis, lymphoma following bone marrow transplant, central nervous system lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and fatal polyclonal
B-cell lymphoma
following mononucleosis; two patients also had chronic pneumonitis, failure to thrive, and abnormal immune function. Six of the nine patients whose tissues contained EBV DNA had a demonstrable or presumed associated immunologic disorder. EBV DNA was not found in normal tissues or in a variety of hematologic neoplasms and other disorders. Nucleic acid hybridization methods can be used for the routine examination of the association of EBV with lymphomas and other lymphoproliferative syndromes occurring in immunodeficient individuals.
...
PMID:Use of cloned probes to detect Epstein-Barr viral DNA in tissues of patients with neoplastic and lymphoproliferative diseases. 631 74
Cyclosporin A depresses the synthesis of gamma interferon by human thymocytes and T lymphocytes in vitro. This observation is of potential clinical significance because the long-term treatment of transplant patients with cyclosporin A, a widely used immunosuppressive agent, can give rise to
B-cell lymphoma
resulting from
Epstein
-Barr virus activation.
...
PMID:Gamma interferon synthesis by human thymocytes and T lymphocytes inhibited by cyclosporin A. 640 12
A 45-year-old woman with T-cell lymphoma is reported. Enlargement of the peripheral lymph nodes was not observed. Splenectomy was performed for hypersplenism and during the operation the mesenteric and retroperitoneal lymph nodes were found to be greatly enlarged. Three years after the diagnosis of lymphoma malabsorption syndrome developed. After 5 years sudden clinical deterioration appeared, with loss of reaction to effective treatment given as yet. Conversion of the predominating lymphocyte subpopulation from T to B cells was observed owing to repeatedly done monitoring of peripheral blood lymphocytes. The pattern of the newly developed lymphoma was that of a highly malignant B-cell proliferation. The possible mechanisms of the conversion discussed by the authors include: simultaneous proliferation of B and T populations of lymphocytes,
B-cell lymphoma
induction by chemotherapy, and infection by
Epstein
-Barr virus.
...
PMID:[Transformation of type T lymphoma into type B lymphoma]. 697 55
Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is the commonest secondary cancer following bone marrow transplantation (BMT). We report the case of a 42-year-old man who developed a laryngeal high-grade
B-cell lymphoma
5 years following a matched T depleted BMT for CML. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis using the microsatellite marker Cyp 19 demonstrated the donor origin of involved tissue.
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) genomic sequences were identified by PCR. Although EBV related B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders (BLPD) post BMT are difficult to treat, there was a complete remission in this patient following three courses of chemotherapy (CHOP) administered with G-CSF. This case of late-onset BLPD appears clinically distinct from the well-defined, aggressive, early post-transplant BLPD.
...
PMID:Localized, late-onset, high-grade lymphoma following bone marrow transplantation: response to combination chemotherapy. 751 97
CD40 is expressed on both normal and neoplastic B lymphocytes. Signal transduction through CD40 in vitro has been shown to exert stimulatory effects on normal B cells and inhibitory effects on
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV)-induced
B-cell lymphoma
lines and some other cell lines derived from patients with aggressive histology lymphoma. The transfer of normal human peripheral blood lymphocytes (huPBL) from EBV-seropositive donors into severe combined immune deficient (SCID) mice has been previously shown to result in the generation of human B-cell lymphomas. These tumors are similar to the highly aggressive EBV-induced lymphomas that can arise clinically after transplantation or in the setting of immunodeficiency. Treatment of huPBL-SCID chimeric mice with anti-CD40 or anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) significantly delayed the development of EBV-induced
B-cell lymphoma
. However, the effects of the two MoAb were mechanistically distinct. Anti-CD40 treatment prevented lymphoma generation, while still allowing for functional human B-cell engraftment in the huPBL-SCID mice compared with mice receiving no treatment, all of which succumbed to lymphoma. By contrast, treatment with anti-CD20 significantly inhibited total human B-cell engraftment in the SCID recipients, which accounted for the absence of lymphomas. In vitro assays examining the transformation of human B cells by EBV also indicated that anti-CD40 could directly inhibit EBV-transformation, whereas anti-CD20 antibodies had no effect. Thus, anti-CD40 exerts selective effects to allow for the engraftment of normal human B cells and prevent the emergence of EBV lymphomas. Stimulation of CD40 by antibodies or its physiologic ligand may, therefore, be of significant clinical use in the prevention of EBV-induced B lymphomas that may arise when EBV-seropositive individuals receive immunosuppressive regimens after transplantation or in immune deficiency states, such as acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:Antibodies to CD40 prevent Epstein-Barr virus-mediated human B-cell lymphomagenesis in severe combined immune deficient mice given human peripheral blood lymphocytes. 754 49
We studied open-lung biopsies from 17 patients with pulmonary lymphomatoid granulomatosis (LYG) using paraffin-section immunostains and
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) RNA in situ hybridization to assess the phenotype of these unique tumors and to clarify the role of EBV infection. Histologically, all cases demonstrated the characteristic mixed mononuclear cell infiltrate of lymphomatoid granulomatosis with variable numbers of cytologically atypical large lymphoid cells in a background of small lymphocytes. Paraffin-section immunostains in all cases showed a predominance of T lymphocytes. A minor population of CD20-positive large B lymphocytes was identified in 11 cases; immunoglobulin light-chain restriction was demonstrated in four of these and immunoglobulin gene rearrangements in another case. Nuclear labelling for EBV RNA was detected in 10 of these 11 cases and was confined to the population of large B lymphocytes. Staining for CD20 was absent in the remaining six cases, as was nuclear labeling for EBV RNA. However, the large atypical lymphoid cells stained for T-cell-lineage-specific antibodies in three of these cases. We conclude that some cases of lymphomatoid granulomatosis are
B-cell lymphoma
associated with EBV infection, whereas others are of T-cell origin and are probably unrelated to EBV infection.
...
PMID:Lymphomatoid granulomatosis. Evidence of immunophenotypic diversity and relationship to Epstein-Barr virus infection. 757 93
A case of T cell-rich
B cell lymphoma
(TCRBCL) with
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) infection in tumor cells is reported. A 50 year old male developed right cervical lymph node swelling in July 1988. Initial biopsy in April 1989 demonstrated many scattered Hodgkinoid atypical cells with Lennert's lesion. After partial remission following chemotherapy, the lymph nodes enlarged again, and a second biopsy in February 1991 showed an IBL-T-like lesion. Only a small number of Hodgkinoid atypical cells were still observed. After apparently, complete remission, the lesion soon recurred and the patient died in November 1992. Immunohistochemically the Hodgkinoid cells were positive for L26, but negative for LN2, LN3, UCHL-1, MT1, lysozyme, Ber-H2 and Leu-M1. Reactivity for immunoglobulins showed false-positive because of polyclonal staining. IgH monoclonality was detected by the polymerase chain reaction method in the first biopsied specimen, and by Southern blotting in the second biopsied snap-frozen specimen. Monoclonal TCR beta rearrangement was not detected. The Hodgkinoid atypical cells were positive for EBV-encoding RNA by in situ hybridization, and LMP-1 by immunostaining. Occasionally, EBV-bearing immunoblastic, medium sized, or small lymphocytic cells were also observed. This case indicates the possibility that EBV is related to the pathogenesis of TCRBCL.
...
PMID:T cell-rich B cell lymphoma bearing Epstein-Barr virus in tumor cells: a case of IBL-T-like lesion following Lennert's lesion. 758 39
Recent histologic, immunophenotypic and genotypic data have restricted the concept of Hodgkin's disease (HD) to the type 2 and 3 of Rye classification. This classification should be revised since the lymphocyte-predominance type has been shown to include the nodular paragranuloma which is a
B-cell lymphoma
, cases which have been confused with T-cell-rich large B-cell non Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and cases which should be reclassified among the mixed cellularity group. Further more, most types 4 are now regarded as anaplastic large cell NHL. Immunophenotypic and genotypic studies support the heterogeneous nature of Reed-Sternberg and Hodgkin's (RSH) cells since they could be derived from B, T or null lymphocytes. In 50% of cases, RSH cells harbour the
Epstein
-Barr virus genome and express a viral protein, the latent membrane protein, which could play an oncogenic role in HD. Finally, RSH cells produce a wide range of cytokines that could stimulate their proliferation and explain the marked cellular reaction that is observed in HD.
...
PMID:[Hodgkin disease: recent histological and biological data]. 759 19
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>