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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (
ferritin
)
17,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Leucocytes containing a high proportion of blast cells were obtained from 11 patients with
acute myeloid leukaemia
, and leucocytes were also obtained from 2 normal subjects. Ferritin was partially purified from leucocyte extracts and subjected to anion-exchange chromatography and isoelectric focusing. The Fe content of leucocyte
ferritin
was low, and in all but one case the preparations contained isoferritins corresponding to those found in normal tissues or serum. Only some of the preparations contained the relatively acidic isoferritins which have been described as "carcinofoetal", but which are also present in normal heart and kidney. Ferritin from one patient contained isoferritins of lower isoelectric point than heart
ferritin
. These results show that there does not appear to be any specific isoelectric focusing pattern for leukaemic cells, and that assays for acidic isoferritins are unlikely to be of use in the diagnosis of leukaemia and in monitoring treatment. However, the very acidic protein found in one preparation suggests that the search for abnormal subunits of
ferritin
may be fruitful in acute leukaemia.
...
PMID:Isoferritins in acute leukaemia. 26 5
The specific antiserum against a type of
ferritin
that is especially common to leukemia cells and the placenta was used to test, by countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis, sera from humans with various diseases. The best results were obtained with leukemia; patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in blastic phase,
acute myelogenous leukemia
, lymphogenous leukemia, and unclassifiable juvenile leukemia frequently showed a positive reaction, but patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in static phase did not. The average incidence of positive reaction among all leukemia patients was 54.0%. Patients with other malignant tumors (i.e., multiple myeloma, malignant lymphoma and carcinomas of the stomach, rectum, and liver) also often showed a positive reaction. The average incidence of positive reaction among all the patients with malignant diseases of the hematopoietic system, except for leukemia, was 34.3%, and that among patients with nonhematologic malignant neoplasms was 36.8%. However, the incidence of a positive reaction in patients with benign diseases and healthy individuals was less than 3%.
...
PMID:Antiserum against leukemia cell ferritin as a diagnostic tool for malignant neoplasms. 105 55
Six of 14 patients with
acute myeloblastic leukemia
(
AML
) complicated reactive histiocytosis during initial remission induction therapy. All six patients had a high fever without signs of infection during initial chemotherapy, and periods of myelosuppression were prolonged. Histiocytes with a mature appearance, some of which phagocyted erythrocytes, thrombocytes or neutrophils, increased in the bone marrow. All of 3 patients tested showed high serum levels of
ferritin
. Two of 3 patients treated with 125 mg/day methylprednisolone achieved complete remission. In the remaining 3 patients, one patient achieved complete remission, but the others died of fungal pneumonia or sepsis. Thus, reactive histiocytosis is one of the severe complications in patients with
AML
undergoing chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[Reactive histiocytosis during initial remission induction therapy for acute myeloblastic leukemia]. 147 93
A 24-year-old woman had been in full remission of an
acute myeloid leukaemia
since 1988, but she required regular erythrocyte and platelet transfusions for pancytopenia. To counteract a progressive siderophilia due to the transfusions (
ferritin
levels of about 10,000 ng/ml) deferoxamine was intermittently given intravenously (5 g after each transfusion). Seven months after the start of this treatment the patient was hospitalized because of severe left-sided facial pain as well as reddening and swelling in the periorbital region. As maxillary and frontal sinusitis was suspected, antibiotics were administered (at first three times daily 2.2 g amoxicillin and clavulanic acid, then two times daily 300 mg rifampicin and 200 mg ciprofloxacin). Nonetheless, orbital phlegmon developed within a few days with protrusion and blindness of the left eye necessitating a decompression operation. Material obtained at operation revealed rhinocerebral mucormycosis. After 3 weeks of antimycotic treatment with both amphotericin B (1 mg/kg.d) and flucytosine (150 mg/kg.d) the mucormycosis healed without the necessity of extensive and disfiguring removal of necrotic tissue. But the blindness in the left eye, caused by occlusion of the central artery, was irreversible.
...
PMID:[Rhinocerebral mucormycosis during deferoxamine therapy]. 152 5
To assess the incidence and the eventual prognostic relevance of pathologic sideroblastosis in myelodysplastic syndromes and
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
, 5 acquired idiopathic sideroblastic anemias, 2 refractory anemias, 9 refractory anemias with excess of blasts, 10 acute nonlymphocytic leukemias were studied with regard to sideroblast type (ring or
ferritin
) and percentage. Pathologic sideroblastosis was commonly found in each subgroup, in some patients it appeared later in the course of the disease while in other reversed. In a successfully treated leukemic patient, pathologic sideroblastosis in otherwise normal bone marrow after therapeutic hypoplasia suggested clonal remission. Although the patient number was small, pathologic sideroblastosis seems to correlate with poor treatment response in leukemic patients. We conclude that systematic looking for pathologic sideroblastosis may have some biologic and clinical implications in myelodysplasia and acute leukemia.
...
PMID:Pathologic sideroblastosis in myelodysplastic syndromes and acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. 176 31
Quantitative and qualitative evaluations of erythrocyte
ferritin
in 161 patients with RA and RAEB in MDS,
AML
, CML, PV, PA, HS, IDA, chronic liver disease and alcoholic liver disease were carried out. Mean erythrocyte
ferritin
levels of patients with RA,
AML
, PA, HS and alcoholic liver disease were increased compared with normal subjects. On isoelectric focusing analyses (IEF), erythrocyte
ferritin
in normal subjects were detected between pI 5.1 and 5.7. In the cases of RA, pI ranges of erythrocyte
ferritin
may be divided into three groups, acidic, neutral, basic shift on IEF respectively. In these groups, the more acidic the
ferritin
shift, the higher the proportion of morphological abnormalities of the erythroid precursors in the bone marrow was observed. In patients with
AML
(M2, M3, M4), little difference was found among these three subtypes, and all of the cases showed similar pattern with normal subjects on IEF. The
ferritin
from IDA showed low levels and slight basic shift compared with normal subjects on IEF, and these features were also found in patients with CML (chronic phase) and PV. After iron supplementation, marked increase of acidic
ferritin
was detected on IEF indicating an intermediate store for iron destined for haem synthesis. It was clear that the stainable iron in liver parenchymal cells were found at erythrocyte
ferritin
concentration 20 ag/cell or over in patients with chronic liver disease. Measurement of erythrocyte
ferritin
concentration is a helpful method for evaluating iron deposition in hepatocyte non-invasively. From these results it is considered that quantitative and qualitative analyses of erythrocyte
ferritin
are very useful for evaluating erythropoiesis as well as iron metabolism.
...
PMID:[Clinical significance of erythrocyte ferritin]. 189 Jul 34
113 patients with
acute myelogenous leukemia
(
AML
), representing 82% of the total cohort of
AML
patients within the geographical area of northern Sweden, were recorded. The total complete remission (CR) rate was 47.8%, and median survival was 4 months. The probability of long-term survival for all patients without exclusions was only 5%. Thus, the results from this study differ strongly from data on patient outcome in most therapy studies in
AML
, where the influence of patient selection on the results is larger. The median age in our patients was 63 years, which is also higher than in most other studies. Elderly patients had a low CR rate (24% in patients greater than or equal to 70 yr), but remission duration was similar in the different age groups. Patients treated according to "high-dose" protocols had a CR rate of 64%, while only 14% of less aggressively treated patients achieved remission. A better response rate after more aggressive chemotherapy was evident also in elderly patients. CR rate was 81% in patients below 60 yr of age who had no antecedent blood disorder and who had had symptoms for less than 3 months. Other variables with prognostic implications were: cytogenetic subgroup, antecedent hematological disease, and level of serum
ferritin
. High serum
ferritin
was associated with short CR duration. Ferritin is produced by the leukemic cells and could be regarded as a marker for leukemic activity.
...
PMID:Remission rate and survival in acute myeloid leukemia: impact of selection and chemotherapy. 201 77
We have used the monoclonal antibodies 2A4 (specific for the H subunit of human
ferritin
) and LO3 (specific for the L subunit) for immunocytochemical detection of
ferritin
in bone marrow and peripheral blood cells from normal subjects and patients with various haematological disorders. Formalin-fixed slides were stained by the immunoalkaline phosphatase procedure (APAAP). In normal subjects,
ferritin
could be found only in bone marrow smears and appeared to be largely confined to erythroid precursors and reticuloendothelial cells. The more immature erythroid precursors contained higher concentrations of cellular
ferritin
. Although evaluation could be only semiquantitative, erythroblast
ferritin
appeared to be more reactive with the monoclonal 2A4 (15 +/- 7% positive erythroblasts) than with the monoclonal LO3 (6 +/- 5% positive erythroblasts), indicating that H-type
ferritin
was predominant, particularly in proerythroblasts and basophilic erythroblasts. By contrast, the
ferritin
present in reticuloendothelial cells appeared to be predominantly of L-type. Patients with iron deficiency showed low levels of positive erythroblast, whereas the reverse was true in patients with transfusional iron overload. Intense positivity for reticuloendothelial cell
ferritin
was found in patients with anaemia of chronic disease. In myelodysplastic syndromes and
acute myeloid leukaemia
(
AML
),
ferritin
positivity was generally very strong at any stage of erythroblast development, particularly with the monoclonal antibody 2A4. Perls-positive perinuclear granules of ring sideroblasts were not stained, confirming that mitochondrial iron deposition is not in the form of
ferritin
. In
AML
and myelodysplastic syndromes with excess of blasts,
ferritin
could be detected also in immature myeloid cells. These data indicate that: (a) in normal conditions
ferritin
is mainly expressed in red cell precursors and reticuloendothelial cells, and this is in keeping with the peculiar role of these cells in iron metabolism; (b) abnormal cell
ferritin
contents can be observed in both iron overload and malignancy.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical detection of ferritin in human bone marrow and peripheral blood cells using monoclonal antibodies specific for the H and L subunit. 226 53
Low-density blood cells from patients with refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB) and RAEB in transformation (RAEB-T) release a high molecular weight inhibitory substance that reduces the entry of normal progenitor cells of granulocytes and macrophages (CFU-GM) into the S-phase. Out of 20 patients with refractory anemia (RA and RAS) only 3 were positive. One patient with CMML was negative. Serial examination of 3 patients (two RA and one CMML) revealed that the production of the inhibitory activity preceded the development of the disease into RAEB, RAEB-T, or
AML
. With one exception, the inhibitory activity in positive cases was neutralized by antiserum against human placental
ferritin
.
...
PMID:Inhibitor of normal granulopoiesis produced by cells of MDS patients. 270 26
In previous studies, antitransferrin receptor antibody 42/6 inhibited growth of normal granulocyte/macrophage progenitors and some malignant myeloid cells. In these studies, leukemia cell lines cultured without serum and fresh leukemia cells were used to investigate the roles of Fe, transferrin receptors, and transferrin in leukemia cell growth, and mechanisms of 42/6 inhibition and resistance. HL60 and KG-1 leukemia cells grown in serum-free medium were inhibited by 42/6. In contrast to results in fetal calf serum (FCS), soluble Fe (ferric nitriloacetate) reversed 42/6 growth inhibition of serum-free HL60 cells. When HL60 cells were adapted for growth in serum-free, transferrin-free medium, they became refractory to 42/6 growth inhibition. By using radiolabeled transferrin and 42/6, HL60 cells cultured in FCS and transferrin displayed similar quantities of transferrin receptors (29,000-30,000/cell) and similar Kd's (3.8-4.9 X 10(-9) M). Cells grown in transferrin-free medium showed a similar Kd (3.1 X 10(-9) M), but fewer transferrin binding sites (5,000/cell). Transferrin-independent cells contained a log higher concentration of intracellular
ferritin
. For both FCS and serum-free HL60 cells, calculated affinities for 42/6 were lower (5.7-10.0 X 10(-9) M), but the number of binding sites was three- to fourfold higher. To investigate further the relationship between receptor display and antibody inhibition in proliferating normal and malignant myeloid cells, simultaneous immunofluorescence was used to determine the cell cycle status of transferrin receptor-positive cells. Malignant cells in S + G2/M displayed approximately 50% of the amount of transferrin receptors detected in normal dividing colony-stimulating factor-stimulated marrow cells. Receptor display by dividing cells from two patients with
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
was variable. When HL60 cells were exposed to dimethyl sulfoxide, transferrin receptor display decreased, and 42/6 growth inhibition was abrogated or greatly diminished. The presence of 42/6 did not prevent dimethyl sulfoxide-induced HL60 differentiation in serum-containing or serum-free cultures. We conclude that human leukemia cells require Fe for growth and that 42/6 inhibits transferrin-dependent cells by Fe deprivation. Some dividing normal and differentiating malignant cells display reduced transferrin receptors, and can also escape antibody inhibition. The increased
ferritin
levels and decreased transferrin receptors in transferrin-independent HL60 cells confirm the inverse relationship between cell
ferritin
content and transferrin receptor display. These studies indicate a critical role for Fe in leukemia cell growth and possible roles in cellular differentiation.
...
PMID:Role of transferrin, Fe, and transferrin receptors in myeloid leukemia cell growth. Studies with an antitransferrin receptor monoclonal antibody. 298 53
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