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Query: UNIPROT:P06126 (CD1a)
2,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We show further differences between two clinically related entities, T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) and lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-LL), by using several monoclonal antibodies (mAb) reacting either with constant or variable regions of T cell receptors (TcR) alpha beta and gamma delta or with various CD molecules. We analysed a panel of 15 T-ALL and 15 T-LL selected for their cell surface expression of the CD3 molecules. The results indicate that TcR gamma delta is more frequently used than TcR alpha beta in T-ALL (10 out of the 15 patients tested). This is in contrast to the results obtained with T-LL where the vast majority expressed TcR alpha beta (13 out of the 15 patients). These findings suggest that the leukemic cells could have a different origin in these two diseases. In addition analysis of TcR variable regions expressed by the leukemic blasts showed that in most cases they had rearranged functional V delta 1 gene segments (8 out of 11 patients) whereas in a unique case V delta 2 gene segment was used. Taken together these results and those indicating that T-ALL cell coexpress the CD1a,b and c molecules strengthen the possibility that even though these leukemic cells express the CD3-TcR complex at their cell surface their normal counterparts are not found in peripheral blood.
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PMID:Utilization of two different T cell receptors by T cell acute lymphoblastic lymphoma and leukemia. 209 7

We show further differences between two clinically related entities, T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) and lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-LL), by using several monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) reacting with either constant or variable regions of T-cell receptors (TcR) alpha beta and gamma delta or with various CD molecules. We analyzed a panel of 15 T-ALL and 15 T-LL selected for their cell surface expression of the CD3 molecules. The results indicated that TcR gamma delta is more frequently used than TcR alpha beta in T-ALL (10 of the 15 patients tested). This is in contrast to the results obtained with T-LL where the vast majority expressed TcR alpha beta (13 of the 15 patients). These findings suggest that the leukemic cells could have a different origin in these two diseases. In addition, analysis of TcR variable regions expressed by the leukemic blasts showed that, in most cases, they had rearranged functional V delta 1 gene segments (8 of 11 patients), whereas in a unique case V delta 2 gene segment was used. Together, these results and those indicating that T-ALL cells coexpress the CD1a, b, and c molecules strengthen the possibility that although these leukemic cells express the CD3-TcR complex at their cell surface, their normal counterparts are not found in peripheral blood.
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PMID:Study of the CD3-associated T-cell receptors reveals further differences between T-cell acute lymphoblastic lymphoma and leukemia. 230 60

We describe the clinical, ultrastructural, and immunophenotypical characteristics of four cases of an unusual type of T cell leukemia. Clinical features included high WBC, ranging from 26-148 x 10(9)/liter, bone marrow infiltration, splenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy. Skin involvement was not documented at presentation, but it was seen as a terminal event in one patient with a pattern of dermal lymphocytic infiltration different from that usually seen in Sezary syndrome. By ultrastructural analysis, the circulating lymphoid cells were indistinguishable from small Sezary cells in two cases, resembled large Sezary cells in one case, and consisted of a mixture of small Sezary cells and prolymphocytes in the remaining case. The cells from all cases had a mature T cell phenotype, TdT-, CD1a-, CD2+/-, CD3+, CD5+. In addition, the cells were either CD8+, CD4- or CD8+, CD4+ or CD4-, CD8-; and, in only one case, the findings were similar to those of Sezary syndrome cells: CD4+, CD8-, CD7-, BE-2+. In the latter case, serological and immunological assays were positive for HTLV-I while these were negative in two other patients investigated. The features of these patients suggest that Sezary cell leukemia is a distinct clinico-pathological entity although the alternative diagnosis of adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma could not be excluded in the HTLV-I+ case. Sezary cell leukemia appears to be resistant to current chemotherapy regimens and is associated with an aggressive clinical course and short survival.
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PMID:Sezary cell-like leukemia: a distinct type of mature T cell malignancy. 236 82

Colonies of cells with distinctive dendritic appearance were observed in methylcellulose cultures of human bone marrow and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Such cells appeared alone in colonies of less than 50 cells, together with macrophages in mixed colonies and also within clusters of T lymphocytes at high culture cell numbers. The morphologic resemblance to lymphoid dendritic cells was confirmed by electron microscopy and the cells were distinguished from macrophages by immunoenzymatic and immunogold labeling with monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs). Like macrophages they were HLA-DR+ and CD4+. However, they lacked nonspecific esterase and the macrophage cytoplasmic marker Y1/82A. Most strikingly, cells were strongly HLA-DQ+ and expressed CD1a (T6), which is characteristic of skin Langerhans cells. Their functional similarity to lymphoid dendritic cells was demonstrated by their ability to stimulate allogeneic mixed leukocyte reactions. Dendritic cell colony numbers were estimated in both bone marrow and peripheral blood of controls and in leukemia and lymphoma patients before and after chemotherapy. Colony numbers were low in control blood and in patients before treatment (less than 1.0 to 3.7/10(5) cells). However, during hematopoietic recovery the mean value increased to 37.5/10(5) cells and this increase correlated closely with the observed increase in circulating colony forming unit-granulocyte macrophage (CFU-GM) in individual patients. Autoradiographic studies demonstrated mitotic activity within CD1a+ colonies and a linear relationship between cultured cells and both pure and mixed colonies was consistent with their derivation from a single precursor. These data indicate that a novel hematopoietic progenitor of dendritic/Langerhans cells (DL-CFU) may now be identified in a clonal assay system and suggest a probable common progenitor for these cells and macrophages.
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PMID:Identification of hematopoietic progenitors of macrophages and dendritic Langerhans cells (DL-CFU) in human bone marrow and peripheral blood. 240 Aug 8

A 71-year-old Japanese woman had two dome-shaped tumors on her right buttock with several surrounding papules. Histological examination revealed that large anaplastic cells and atypical lymphoid cells densely infiltrated the entire dermis. On immunohistochemical examination, Ki-1, HLA-DR, CD25 (IL-2 receptor alpha), CD122 (IL-2 receptor beta), CD4, CD11c and CD68 were all positive in the tumor cells, whereas CD1a, CD3, CD5, CD8 and CD19 were negative. Neither rearrangement of the T-cell receptor beta, T-cell receptor gamma nor the immunoglobulin heavy-chain was seen. Ultrastructurally, most of the tumor cells contained thick bundles of intermediate filaments in the perinuclear cytoplasm. Thus, this patient was diagnosed as having Ki-1-positive lymphoma of non-T, non-B origin. No recurrence or metastasis of the tumor has been observed in the last 2 years, although surgical resection was required 3 times before control was achieved.
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PMID:Primary cutaneous CD30(Ki-1)-positive lymphoma of non-T, non-B origin. 759 89

In lymphoproliferative diseases of the skin, DC have a key role in T- and B-cell homing. Furthermore, DC alterations may have a pathogenic role in the natural history of specific disorders, either in the neoplastic lymphoid cell progression or in antitumoral lymphocyte reaction. Finally, the morphoantigenic and topographic features of DC may have diagnostic and histogenetic relevance in specific conditions. In CTCL, dermal CD1a+ DC ("indeterminate cells") seem to play a significant role in the neoplastic progression of MF, whereas the possible pathogenetic role of specific alterations of epidermal LC is yet to be proven. Recently, a possible implication of DD (resident, perivascular factor XIIIa+/CD1a- DC) in the pathogenesis of MF has been also suggested. The presence and possible significance of DC in CTCL non-MF are presently poorly studied. At present, DC number, distribution, and phenotype seem possibly useful in the differential diagnosis between CTCL and pseudo-CTCL, but this hypothesis has to be adequately confirmed. CBCL has been recently proposed as a unique type of clinically low-grade lymphoma, namely, skin-associated lymphoid tissue (SALT)-related B-cell lymphoma. Both SALT- and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT)-related B-cell lymphoma share with a peculiar nodal lymphoma of follicle mantle origin (parafollicular-monocytoid lymphoma) the nonaggressive clinical behavior and the uniform phenotype (CD5-, CD10-) and genotype (lack of bcl-2 gene rearrangement) of neoplastic B cells, despite the wide variability of cytomorphologic appearances. The putative origin of CBCL is further supported by the typical CD14-, nerve growth factor receptor (NGFr)+ immunophenotype of DRC. Moreover, the immunophenotype and architectural fashion of DRC are interesting clues to the differentiation between neoplastic and true reactive folliclelike nodules and may be of help in the differential diagnosis between CBCL and B-cell pseudolymphoma as well as in the correct interpretation of lesions showing monoclonal proliferations of B cells accompanied by polyclonal follicular reactions.
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PMID:Dendritic cells in T- and B-cell proliferation in the skin. 804 37

The clinical and pathologic features of an unusual case of mediastinal lymphoma in a 46-yr-old man are presented. Histology of the tumor was that of a diffuse, non-large cell lymphoma. The nuclear chromatin was coarse, suggesting a relatively mature stage of lymphocyte maturation, and the lymphoma was provisionally classified as diffuse small-cleaved cell lymphoma. Immunohistologic study and cell surface marker analysis revealed a common thymocytic phenotype (CD3, CD1a, CD4, CD8, and TdT positive), however, and DNA flow cytometric analysis revealed a high S+G2 M fraction of 29%. With the immunostaining profile accepted as definitive for lymphoblastic lymphoma, histologic features were reassessed in retrospect. Cells having nuclear features typical of lymphoblasts were not recognized. Occasional cases of lymphoblastic lymphoma may not be recognizable when evaluated only by histology using the generally accepted criteria for diagnosis.
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PMID:Mediastinal lymphoblastic lymphoma with non-lymphoblastic histologic features. 815 54

We describe the case of a patient with peripheral gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma (T-ML) with hepatosplenomegaly, generalized lymphadenopathy, and bone marrow involvement. A 44-year-old man had lymphoma, which became clinically apparent 2 months after the onset of myositis and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. A cervical lymph node biopsy specimen showed diffuse infiltration by large neoplastic cells with vascular proliferation. The neoplastic cells expressed the T-cell receptor (TCR)delta chain detected by TCR delta 1 and delta-TCS1, CD3, CD30, CD45RO, and epithelial membrane antigen, but not the TCR beta chain detected by beta F1, CD1a, CD2, CD4, CD5, CD7, CD8, CD25, HLA-DR, and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase. The cells had a clonal rearrangement of TCR gamma chain gene and a germ-line configuration of immunoglobulin heavy chain gene and TCR beta chain gene. Despite chemotherapy, the patient died of refractory lymphoma 4 months after diagnosis. Examination at autopsy revealed that the main hepatic and splenic neoplastic infiltration sites were the portal area and white pulp, respectively. Our patient differed from those with gamma/delta T-ML with hepatosplenic involvement reported previously with respect to the hepatic and splenic neoplastic infiltration patterns and the presence of lymphadenopathy.
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PMID:Gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma with hepatosplenomegaly: report of a case. 836 90

The immunophenotype of 304 adult lymphoblastic leukemias (> 18 years) diagnosed on the basis of the FAB criteria was determined at the time of diagnosis using a panel of monoclonal antibodies. The series comprised cases diagnosed and immunophenotyped in 43 Italian centers (GIMEMA Cooperative Group) between April 1988 and June 1991. The immunophenotypic characterization consisted of two consecutive steps. The initial screening was based on the reactivity for TdT, HLA-Dr, CD7, CD10, CD13, CD19, CD24, CD33 and CD41. According to the results obtained, the second level of investigation assessed the positivity for intra cytoplasmic (Cy) Ig, CD1a, CD2, CD3, CD4, CD5, CD8 and CD20. Based on the hierarchical expression of the different B- and T-cell related antigens, each case was assigned to a given differentiation stage. B-lineage ALL were classified in five subgroups (B0-B4) and T-lineage ALL in four subgroups (T0-T3). Cases in which the blasts were lymphoid according to the FAB criteria, but expressed myeloid antigens in association with B- and T-lymphoid markers were defined as hybrid leukemias. As expected, CD10+ cases (B2-B3) were the most frequent within the B-lineage ALL (83.2% of cases). CyIg+ (B3) accounted for about 20% of CD10+ ALL. Twenty eight cases (13.4%) were at a pre-cALL stage (B0-B1) and of these, 8 (3.8% of the total series) were positive only for TdT and HLA-Dr (B0). Intermediate and mature thymic phenotypes (T2-T3) were predominant within the T-ALL (67.2%) groups. Five cases, were positive only for TdT and CD7 (CD5+), and classified as T0. 9.2% of cases fulfilled the definition of hybrid leukemia, largely in view of the co-expression of B-lymphoid and myeloid markers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Leuk Lymphoma 1993 Feb
PMID:Immunophenotype of acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells: the experience of the Italian Cooperative Group (Gimema). 847 81

We report a case of CD30 positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma of T-cell phenotype developing in association with long-standing tuberculous pyothorax. Phenotypic analysis showed CD1a-, CD2+, CD3+, CD4+, CD5-, CD8-, CD10-, CD19-, CD20 +/-, CD21-, CD25-, CD56-, T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha/beta antigens-, and HLA-DR+ phenotype. Neither rearrangement of TCR beta and gamma chain genes or of immunoglobulin heavy chain gene was detected in DNA extract from fresh material. The lymphoma cells were also shown to express the latent membrane protein-1 and the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-encoded nuclear antigen-2 by immunohistochemistry and EBV-encoded small RNAs by in situ hybridization.
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PMID:Ki-1 (CD30) positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma of T-cell phenotype developing in association with long-standing tuberculous pyothorax: report of a case with detection of Epstein-Barr virus genome in the tumor cells. 852 14


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