Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UNIPROT:P06126 (
CD1a
)
2,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) specialized to internalize, process, and present antigen. They have the capacity to stimulate the primary immune response of resting T-cells. We generated DCs from the adherent cell fraction of peripheral blood, as well as from purified CD34+ cells from CML patients. Characterizing DCs from ten CML patients by flow cytometry, we found that these cells are highly positive for HLA-DR,
CD1a
, CD23, and CD80 and negative for CD14, CD15, and CD16. The yield of DCs ranged from 19.5 to 68%. In addition, we used a functional test of FITC-dextran uptake to verify that early DCs take up large particles (0.5-3 microm) by macropinocytosis while monocytes do not. FITC-dextran uptake was detected by flow cytometry, showing that DCs had accumulated these fluorescent particles. Electron-microscopic analysis showed no major morphological differences between normal and CML-derived DCs. Furthermore, cultured DCs were isolated by
FAC
sorting for
CD1a
and HLA-DR expression. In these highly purified cells the Ph chromosome was detected by interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and by fluorescence immunophenotyping and interphase cytogenetics as a tool for the investigation of neoplasms (FICTION); 30-85% of DCs generated were Ph-chromosome positive. It might therefore be possible not only to prime T-cells with bcr/abl-specific synthetic peptides, but also to stimulate T-cells directly with Ph-positive DCs. Use of DCs might serve as a novel therapeutic approach in CML patients, due to their ability to induce highly specific T-cell responses in an autologous system.
...
PMID:Generation of dendritic cells from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. 1034 49
A 49-year-old Hispanic woman with a T4N1M0 infiltrating duct carcinoma of the left breast underwent four courses of
FAC
(doxorubicin 86 mg, 5-fluorouracil 860 mg, cyclophosphamide 86 mg, and dexamethasone 10 mg) adjuvant chemotherapy plus four courses of paclitaxel (Taxol; Bristol-Myers Squibb Oncology, Princeton, NJ) and subsequent mastectomy. The tumor shrunk from 6.5 cm to 2.5 cm after the treatment. The residual tumor in the surgical specimen measured 1.5 cm with eight positive out of 24 axillary lymph nodes. The tumor showed typical chemotherapy changes and a massive proliferation of histiocytes that mimicked a neoplasm. A nodular proliferation of the same cells in one axillary node raised the impression of a second malignant tumor in the breast spreading to the node. The histiocytic cells contained lamellar and coarse periodic acid-Schiff-positive material distending their cytoplasm and they were strongly positive for CD68 and negative for
CD1a
, pan keratin, and S-100. These findings ruled out histiocytoid carcinoma, granular cell tumor, and Erdheim-Chester disease. The proliferating histiocytes had ultrastructural findings of paclitaxel-induced cytotoxicity with disorganized stacks of intermediate filaments positive for vimentin by immunostains and fewer masses of tubulin. The treated breast carcinoma cells were tubulin-positive but the proliferating histiocytes were tubulin-negative.
...
PMID:Pseudoneoplastic proliferation of histiocytes with paclitaxel-induced ultrastructural changes in a mastectomy specimen. 1549 38