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  • Nature Publishing Group  (4,398)
  • American Society of Hematology
  • 2005-2009
  • 1995-1999  (5,742)
  • 1980-1984
  • 1975-1979
  • 1995  (5,742)
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  • 2005-2009
  • 1995-1999  (5,742)
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  • 1
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 376 (6538). pp. 301-302.
    Publication Date: 2018-08-15
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  • 2
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 374 (6520). p. 314.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-06
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  • 3
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 377 (6545). p. 107.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-04
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  • 4
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 373 . p. 28.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
    Description: Seismic tomography and the isotope geochemistry of Cenozoic volcanic rocks suggest the existence of a large, sheet-like region of upwelling in the upper mantle which extends from the eastern Atlantic Ocean to central Europe and the western Mediterranean. A belt of extension and rifting in the latter two areas appears to lie above the intersection of the centre of the upwelling region with the base of the lithosphere. Lead, strontium and neodymium isotope data for all three regions converge on a restricted composition, inferred to be that of the upwelling mantle.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
    Description: THE hydrothermal circulation of sea water through permeable ocean crust results in rock–water interactions that lead to the formation of massive sulphide deposits. These are the modern analogues of many ancient ophiolite-hosted deposits1–4, such as those exposed in Cyprus. Here we report results obtained from drilling a series of holes into an actively forming sulphide deposit on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. A complex assemblage of sulphide–anhydrite–silica breccias provides striking evidence that such hydrothermal mounds do not grow simply by the accumulation of sulphides on the sea floor. Indeed, the deposit grows largely as an in situ breccia pile, as successive episodes of hydrothermal activity each form new hydrothermal precipitates and cement earlier deposits. During inactive periods, the collapse of sulphide chimneys, dissolution of anhydrite, and disruption by faulting cause brecciation of the deposit. The abundance of anhydrite beneath the present region of focused hydrothermal venting reflects the high temperatures ( 〉 150 °C) currently maintained within the mound, and implies substantial entrainment of cold sea water into the interior of the deposit. These observations demonstrate the important role of anhydrite in the growth of massive sulphide deposits, despite its absence in those preserved on land.
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  • 7
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 376 (6537). pp. 212-213.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-16
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The stem cell inhibitor, macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha) or LD78, protects multipotent hematopoietic progenitors in murine models from the cytotoxic effects of chemotherapy. Clinical use of human MIP-1 alpha during chemotherapy could therefore lead to faster hematologic recovery and may allow dose intensification. We have also shown that human MIP-1 alpha causes the rapid mobilization of hematopoietic cells, suggesting an additional clinical use in peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. However, the clinical evaluation of human MIP-1 alpha is complicated by its tendency to associate and form high molecular weight polymers. We have produced a variant of rhMIP-1 alpha, BB-10010, carrying a single amino acid substitution of Asp26 〉 Ala, with a reduced tendency to form large polymers at physiologic pH and ionic strength. This greatly increases its solubility, facilitating its production and clinical formulation. We confirmed the potency of BB-10010 as a human MIP-1 alpha-like agonist in receptor binding, calcium mobilization, inhibition of colony formation, and thymidine suicide assays. The myeloprotective activity of BB-10010 was shown in a murine model of repeated chemotherapy using hydroxyurea. BB-10010 is therefore an ideal variant with which to evaluate the therapeutic potential of recombinant human MIP-1 alpha.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Peripheral blood stem cells and progenitor cells, collected during recovery from exposure to cytotoxic agents or after cytokine administration, are being increasingly used in clinical bone marrow transplantation. To determine factors important for mobilization of both primitive stem cells and progenitor cells to the blood, we studied the blood and splenic and marrow compartments of intact and splenectomized mice after administration of recombinant human interleukin-11 (rhlL-11), recombinant rat stem cell factor (rrSCF), and IL-11 + SCF. IL-11 administration increased the number of spleen colony- forming units (CFU-S) in both the spleen and blood, but did not increase blood long-term marrow-repopulating ability (LTRA) in intact or splenectomized mice. SCF administration increased the number of CFU- S in both the spleen and blood and did not increase the blood or splenic LTRA of intact mice, but did increase blood LTRA to normal marrow levels in splenectomized mice. The combination of lL-11 + SCF syngeristically enhanced mobilization of long-term marrow-repopulating cells from the marrow to the spleen of intact mice and from the marrow to the blood of splenectomized mice. These data, combined with those of prior studies showing granulocyte colony-stimulating factor mobilization of long-term marrow repopulating cells from the marrow to the blood of mice with intact spleens, suggest different cytokine- induced pathways for mobilization of primitive stem cells.
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: This study was undertaken to identify the signaling events involved in activation of neutrophil superoxide anion (O2-) production by eosinophil granule major basic protein (MBP). MBP did not produce an immediate increase in the cytosolic free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i), characteristic of phospholipase C activation, but did cause a gradual increase in [Ca2+]i in cytochalasin B-treated cells. Preincubation with 0.01 to 3 micrograms/mL pertussis toxin did not inhibit MBP-stimulated O2- production, and MBP did not stimulate an increase in diradylglycerol levels. MBP did stimulate a low level of phospholipase D activity, as measured by a time-dependent increase in phosphatidic acid and, in the presence of 0.5% ethanol, phosphatidylethanol. Inhibition of MBP-stimulated O2- production by genistein and Western blot analysis using an antiphosphotyrosine antibody showed tyrosine kinase activation by MBP. Calmodulin antagonists (calmidazolium and W-7) caused up to 80% inhibition of MBP- stimulated O2- production. In agreement with the pharmacologic sensitivity, MBP did not stimulate any 51Cr release. These data indicate that tyrosine kinase and calmodulin-dependent steps are involved in the noncytotoxic stimulation of neutrophil O2- production by MBP.
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The PLZF gene was discovered by studying a rearrangement of the RAR alpha locus in a patient with acute promyelocytic leukemia and a t(11;17) chromosomal translocation. To understand further the potential role(s) of the PLZF gene product in hematopoiesis, we have examined its expression levels in a variety of murine tissues and in established cell lines that are representative of various stages of myeloid and lymphoid development. We show that murine PLZF(mPLZF) is expressed at the highest levels in undifferentiated, multipotential hematopoietic progenitor cells and that its expression declines as cells become more mature and committed to various hematopoietic lineages. Data obtained with established cell lines are corroborated by results showing the lack of human PLZF protein expression in mature peripheral blood mononuclear cells and high PLZF levels in the nuclei of CD34+ human bone marrow progenitor cells. Interestingly, unlike many transcription factors, PLZF protein in these cells possesses distinct punctate nuclear distribution, suggesting its compartmentalization in the nucleus. Taken together, our data suggest a role for PLZF protein in early hematopoiesis and the requirement of downregulation of its expression for proper differentiation of most hematopoietic lineages.
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Treatment of severe aplastic anemia with antithymocyte globulin (ATG) and cyclosporin leads to clinical remission in a large proportion of patients. As many as 10% to 57% of these patients, however, develop paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). We and others have observed that this secondary PNH appears to be more indolent than classical PNH, which results from an acquired mutation in the PIG-A gene. In the present study, we compared PIG-A mRNA transcripts in affected cells from patients with secondary PNH and patients with classical PNH. All four of our aplastic patients who developed PNH had a negative Ham test at diagnosis. Two of the four showed a positive Ham test within 3 months after ATG/cyclosporin administration, one developed a positive test at 6 months, and another at 18 months after immunosuppressive therapy. All four patients remain transfusion-independent with no thrombotic episodes after a mean follow-up of 30 months (range, 6 to 63 months). Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of PIG-A transcripts in DAF-/CD59- neutrophils or lymphocyte lines of the four patients showed PIG-A abnormalities in all cases. Transition of C163 to T was found in one, a 14-bp deletion (positions 1141 to 1154) was found in the second, deletion of C39 was found in the third, and two mutations, transition of C55 to T and transversion of T762 to A, were found in the fourth. These abnormalities compared with findings of abnormal RNA splicing causing a 133-bp deletion, a 4-bp insertion (between positions 578 and 579), loss of A767, and loss of C575 in four patients with primary PNH. We conclude that secondary PNH that evolves out of aplastic anemia, like classical PNH, is associated with mutations in the PIG-A gene. The apparent indolent nature of this disease probably reflects early detection.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: We recently developed a two-step clonal cell culture system for murine lymphohematopoietic progenitors that are capable of producing myeloid and B-lymphoid progenies and characterized their cytokine requirements. We subsequently observed that addition of interleukin-3 (IL-3) or IL-1 alpha to permissive cytokine combinations in primary culture abrogates the B-lymphoid potential but not the myeloid potential of the lymphohematopoietic progenitors. We now describe a similar negative regulation of the T-cell potential of the lymphohematopoietic progenitors. Lin- Ly-6A/E+ marrow cells from 5-fluorouracil-treated mice were plated individually by micromanipulation in methylcellulose culture with steel factor (SF) and IL-11 for 8 days. The resulting colonies were tested for myeloid potential by reculturing part of each colony in secondary myeloid suspension culture. Remainders of individual primary colonies were injected intravenously into scid mice for determination of T- and B-lymphoid potentials. Approximately 10% of the progenitors that differentiated along myeloid lineages in culture reconstituted T- and B-cell compartments in scid mice. However, when scid mice were injected with colonies pooled from cultures containing steel factor, IL-11, and either IL-3 or IL-1 alpha, there was no reconstitution of thymocytes or spleen T cells. These results suggest negative regulatory roles for IL-3 and IL-1 alpha in the early stages of T lymphopoiesis.
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The higher susceptibility to serious bacterial infections in patients with Gaucher disease (GD) may be due in part to defective function of phagocytic cells. We studied five patients with GD (type I) and examined the ability of granulocytes and mononuclear phagocytes from these patients to phagocytose and kill Staphylococcus aureus and to generate superoxide anion (O2-) on stimulation with fully opsonized bacteria. Serum-opsonized staphylococci were ingested equally by phagocytic cells from patients and controls. In the presence of normal serum, the extent of killing of S aureus and the release of O2- by granulocytes over incubation periods of 60 minutes and 30 minutes, respectively, were also equivalent for patients and controls. However, we found that killing of viable bacteria and release of O2- by the patients' monocytes was significantly lower than that in cells from controls (P 〈 .05 for both). The magnitude of differences in killing and O2- release between patients' cells and those from controls was even more profound with monocyte-derived macrophages. Enzyme augmentation with macrophage-targeted glucocerebrosidase preparation for 6 months at doses from 7.5 to 10 U/kg/wk resulted in significant increases of functional activities and O2- generation of monocytes and macrophages along with hematologic and hepatosplenic improvements. These data suggest that mononuclear phagocytes from GD patients are defective in their ability to kill bacteria and to generate reactive oxygen intermediates. Our data also suggest that enzyme substitution may improve functions of monocytes and macrophages in patients with GD that should make them more resistant to severe bacterial infection.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Corticosteroids exhibit extensive hematopoietic effects both in vitro and in vivo. Some of the previously studied effects suggested that corticosteroids may alter hematopoietic toxicity of chemotherapeutic agents. In this study, we examined (1) the optimum dose and schedule of cortisone acetate (CA) to reduce hematopoietic toxicity of carboplatin (CB) and (2) possible mechanisms involved in this protective effect. CA given subcutaneously at 0.5 mg/d per mouse for 7 days before CB reduced CB-induced mortality due to neutropenia from 88% in controls to 14% in CA-treated mice (P 〈 .05). Lower CA doses were not effective. Three days of pretreatment (but not 1 day) was as effective as 7 days. CA given after CB had no effect on mortality. Pharmacokinetic studies of CA at 0.5 mg per mouse demonstrated blood levels of cortisol achievable in patients (peak level, 82 micrograms/dL). CA treatment markedly reduced spleen cell number and colony-forming units- granulocyte/macrophage (CFU-GM) as well as bone marrow CFU-GM. Bone marrow CFU-GM removed from CA-treated mice demonstrated increased resistance to platinum and increased resistance to high specific activity 3H-thymidine. These findings suggest that treatment of mice with CA induces cellular resistance of hematopoietic precursors to platinum and, thus, reduces CB hematotoxicity. CA or other corticosteroids may be useful in reducing clinical toxicity of CB.
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  • 17
  • 18
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Recently, the ligand for c-mpl, a member of the family of cytokine receptors, was cloned and found to be a physiologic regulator of platelet homeostasis. We report that megakaryocyte growth and development factor (MGDF, thrombopoietin [TPO], c-mpl ligand ) induces differentiation in a majority of mpl-transfected 32D cells, while interleukin (IL)-3 is exclusively mitogenic in this system. MGDF differentiation, as measured by decreased proliferation, changes in cellular morphology, increased adherence, and downregulation of very late antigen (VLA)-4, is dominant over IL-3 proliferation. MGDF induces tyrosine-phosphorylation of mpl, JAK2, SHC, SHPTP-1 (HCP, motheaten) and SHPTP-2 (Syp, PTP-1D) within 30 seconds of stimulation, as well as of vav and MAPK with slightly delayed kinetics. A fraction of mpl and JAK2 is preassociated, and the stoichiometry of this complex is unaltered by cytokine stimulation. After MGDF stimulation, we detect interactions among SHC, grb2, SHPTP-1, SHPTP-2, and the mpl/JAK2 complex. IL-3 induces phosphorylation of the above proteins with the exception of mpl and also causes weak JAK1 phosphorylation. Although similar in composition, the MGDF- and IL-3-induced complexes of signal transducers appear to be assembled in different configurations, especially with respect to SHPTP-2. Both MGDF and IL-3 induce tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT3 (APRF) and STAT5 (MGF), with MGDF favoring STAT3 while IL-3 predominantly causes STAT5 phosphorylation. In addition, some proteins become tyrosine-phosphorylated in response to MGDF only, suggesting that we may have detected differentiation- specific signal transducers. These include a number of high-molecular- weight proteins (140 to 200 kD) and one 28-kD protein that becomes tyrosine-phosphorylated only briefly.
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Peripheral blood monocytes respond to interleukin-2 (lL-2) and express the gamma common (gamma c) subunit of the lL-2 receptor (lL-2R) complex. However, the role of lL-2 in myeloid development has recently become of interest for several reasons, including the effect gamma c mutations may or may not have on myeloid development in patients with XSCID. Many studies of lL-2 function in the myeloid cell lineage have been performed on a murine background. To study gamma c expression and function in human myeloid precursors, we introduced the human myelomonocytic cell line, Tf-1, with a retroviral vector containing the human lL-2R beta subunit to create functional human intermediate lL-2R consisting of beta gamma c dimers. We have characterized this transfected variant of Tf-1 (Tf-1 beta) with regard to its response to lL-2. Unlike the parental Tf-1 cell line that is deficient in both lL- 2R alpha and lL-2R beta expression, the Tf-1 beta transfectant binds and responds to lL-2 through intermediate-affinity lL-2Rs. Scatchard analyses indicate the number of intermediate-affinity receptors on Tf-1 beta is similar to the number found on the well-characterized YT cell line. However, detection of gamma c on Tf-1 beta cells is dramatically less than on YT cells by Western blot analysis and is undetectable by flow cytometric studies and surface iodinations. The gamma c component on YT cells is readily detected by all three methods. We conclude from these studies that the intermediate-affinity lL-2Rs on the Tf-1 cell line behave differently than those on YT cells with respect to gamma c detection. Either the gamma c molecule itself is different, or the cellular environment in which it functions is altered. Elucidation of gamma c function on this cell line will allow for its use as a model in which other cytokines using gamma c (including lL-2, lL-4, and lL-15) can be studied on the same cellular background.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Previous phase I-II clinical trials have shown that recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo) can ameliorate anemia in a portion of patients with multiple myeloma (MM) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Therefore, we performed a randomized controlled multicenter study to define the optimal initial dosage and to identify predictors of response to rHuEpo. A total of 146 patients who had hemoglobin (Hb) levels 〈 or = 11 g/dL and who had no need for transfusion at the time of enrollment entered this trial. Patients were randomized to receive 1,000 U (n = 31), 2,000 U (n = 29), 5,000 U (n = 31), or 10,000 U (n = 26) of rHuEpo daily subcutaneously for 8 weeks or to receive no therapy (n = 29). Of the patients, 84 suffered from MM and 62 from low- to intermediate- grade NHL, including chronic lymphocytic leukemia; 116 of 146 (79%) received chemotherapy during the study. The mean baseline Hb level was 9.4 +/- 1.0 g/dL. The median serum Epo level was 32 mU/mL, and endogenous Epo production was found to be defective in 77% of the patients, as judged by a value for the ratio of observed-to-predicted serum Epo levels (O/P ratio) of 〈 or = 0.9. An intention-to-treat analysis was performed to evaluate treatment efficacy. The median average increase in Hb levels per week was 0.04 g/dL in the control group and -0.04 (P = .57), 0.22 (P = .05), 0.43 (P = .01), and 0.58 (P = .0001) g/dL in the 1,000 U, 2,000 U, 5,000 U, and 10,000 U groups, respectively (P values versus control). The probability of response (delta Hb 〉 or = 2 g/dL) increased steadily and, after 8 weeks, reached 31% (2,000 U), 61% (5,000 U), and 62% (10,000 U), respectively. Regression analysis using Cox's proportional hazard model and classification and regression tree analysis showed that serum Epo levels and the O/P ratio were the most important factors predicting response in patients receiving 5,000 or 10,000 U. Approximately three quarters of patients presenting with Epo levels inappropriately low for the degree of anemia responded to rHuEpo, whereas only one quarter of those with adequate Epo levels did so. Classification and regression tree analysis also showed that doses of 2,000 U daily were effective in patients with an average platelet count greater than 150 x 10(9)/L. About 50% of these patients are expected to respond to rHuEpo. Thus, rHuEpo was safe and effective in ameliorating the anemia of MM and NHL patients who showed defective endogenous Epo production. From a practical point of view, we conclude that the decision to use rHuEpo in an individual anemic patient with MM or NHL should be based on serum Epo levels, whereas the choice of the initial dosage should be based on residual marrow function.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Oligonucleotide primers for human interleukin-6 (IL-6) that bracketed the entire coding region of the gene were used in reverse transciptase- polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) studies to examine lL-6 expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). In addition to the predicted 0.64-kb RT-PCR product, a second 0.45-kb product was observed. Cloning and dideoxy sequence analysis of this product revealed evidence for an alternatively spliced lL-6 transcript lacking exon II. Further RT-PCR analysis using forward primers ending at or one base before the exon I donor splice site again yielded both products. Additional primers were designed and successfully used to selectively distinguish the two forms of IL-6 transcript. Both transcripts were prominent in peripheral blood monocytes and lymphocytes, whereas only the 0.64-kb, full-length transcript was prominent in the lL-6-producing 5637 (human bladder carcinoma) cell line. Northern analysis revealed, in addition to the predominant 1.3-kb transcript, several minor transcripts at 1.9 to 4.8 kb that hybridized with the alternatively spliced cDNA probe but not with an exon II probe. Western analysis revealed lL-6 polypeptides of predicted size (26 to 29 kD) in culture medium from PBMC, while showing an immunoreactive band at 17 kD in cell lysates. These findings suggest the existence of an alternatively spliced form of lL-6 mRNA, which would encode for a polypeptide missing the gp130 interactive (signal-transducing) domain contained in exon II while retaining the lL-6 receptor (p80) domain. Such a molecule could in theory function as a natural antagonist of lL-6, as it would be expected to bind to the IL-6 receptor but not lead to signal transduction.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: CD26 and CD40 ligand (CD40L) are surface molecules on human activated T lymphocytes that play a critical role in the regulation of lymphopoiesis. Both molecules are expressed on a restricted fraction of human T-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL)/leukemias; however, little is known about their functional and/or clinical significance in these disorders. In this study, the pattern of expression of CD40L was compared with that of the CD26 molecule. A series of 67 human T-cell NHL/leukemias and a panel of leukemia/lymphoma T-cell lines were evaluated by immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, and RNA studies. The overall frequency of CD26+ and CD40L+ samples was rather similar (25/67 [37%] v 18/67 [27%]). However, the majority of CD26-expressing cases clustered in the lymphoblastic lymphomas (LBL)/T-acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALL; 12/23) and CD30+ anaplastic large-cell (ALC) lymphomas (5/8), whereas CD40L+ lymphomas included a large fraction of mycosis fungoides (11/21 [52%]). CD26 and CD40L coexpression was found only in 2 myocosis fungoides cases and 1 small lymphocytic lymphoma. Thus, the expression of the two antigens was mutually exclusive in almost all T- cell lymphomas/leukemias. Accordingly, lymphoma cell lines expressed either one of the molecules or the relative amounts of CD26 and CD40L were inversely proportional. In contrast, reactive T lymphocytes from patients with non-neoplastic T-cell expansions and in vitro activated CD3+ or CD4+ normal T cells were found to coexpress CD40L and CD26. Results of a multivariate analysis showed that the expression of CD26 in T-cell LBL/ALL patients was associated to a worse outcome in terms of survival, as compared with patients with CD26- tumors (P 〈 or = .0001). Based on our results, it can be concluded that, (1) as opposed to activated or reactive normal T cells, the expression of CD26 and of CD40L is mutually exclusive in human T-cell lymphomas/leukemias; (2) expression of CD26 is restricted to aggressive pathologic entities, such as T-cell LBL/ALL and T-cell CD30+ ALC lymphomas, whereas CD40L is expressed on slow progressing diseases such as mycosis fungoides; and (3) within the T-cell LBL/ALL group of tumors, CD26 may identify a subset of poor prognosis patients.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Leukocyte rolling, an early and important step in the inflammatory response, is mediated by the selectin family of adhesion molecules. The selectins bind with low affinity to sialylated and fucosylated glycans such as sialyl Lewisx (sLex), but bind with high affinity to only a few specific glycoproteins on cell surfaces. One such glycoprotein is P- selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1). The relative contributions of low- and high-affinity ligands to leukocyte rolling in vivo are unknown. We show here that a monoclonal antibody to PSGL-1 (PL1) dramatically reduces rolling of human polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) and promyelocytic HL-60 cells in venules of acutely exteriorized rat mesentery. Control PMN and HL-60 cell rolling flux fractions were 39% +/- 3% and 33% +/- 5%, which were reduced by PL1 to 7% +/- 2% and 6% +/- 2%, respectively. Similar reductions were seen with F(ab) fragments of PL1. PL1-treated PMN rolled at significantly higher mean velocities than untreated PMN owing to intermittent rather that continuous interactions. These findings show that interaction of P- selectin with PSGL-1 is required for rolling of myeloid cells in mesenteric venules at physiologic shear stress in vivo.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Significant morbidity and mortality are associated with the conditioning therapy needed for postnatal bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for inherited diseases. This could be eliminated with hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation in utero, when the immunoincompetence of the fetus permits engraftment without the need for immunosuppressive therapy. We have established an in utero (day 11 to day 13) model of HSC transplantation in nondefective, allogeneic major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-mismatched mice. Donor cells wre from pooled fetal livers of C57BL/6 (H-2b, GPI-1b) mice. Engraftment was tested by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the Y chromosome in female recipients (with 0.00001% sensitivity). Eight percent (3 of 36) of allogeneic mismatched (Balb-c, H-2d) recipients and 25% (3 of 12) of congenic (C57B1/6, GPI-1a) recipients showed durable engraftment (male donor cells detected beyond 20 weeks of age) based on analysis of peripheral blood leukocytes (P 〉 .08). When spleen and liver were analyzed, 51% (17 of 33) of allogeneic recipients and 50% (6 of 12) of congenic recipients showed durable engraftment (P 〉 .3). The percent donor cells that durably engrafted varied from as low as 0.0001% in spleen and liver to as high as 0.6% in peripheral blood. Postnatal boosting with a single dose of allogeneic MHC-mismatched donor cells in a tolerant, engrafted mouse resulted in a significant increase in donor cells in the peripheral blood from 0.2% pre-boost to 5% 6 months after the boost. There was no evidence of engraftment in nontolerant mice after the postnatal boost with a similar dose of donor cells. Twenty-two allogeneic recipients were evaluated for donor skin graft acceptance at 6 to 12 months of age. Three mice with engraftment in blood and/or tissue permanently accepted donor skin grafts, one of them with donor cells detectable only in the liver. Six additional mice that showed prolonged skin graft acceptance had no evidence of durable engraftment in the blood but were engrafted in the liver and/or spleen. The degree of engraftment in tolerant mice was low (〈 or = 0.1% donor cells). We conclude that at an early gestational age in nondefective mice (1) high rates of durable engraftment are achievable, although the degree of engraftment is usually low (less than 1%); (2) the percent of donor cells in the peripheral blood may be increased by a postnatal boost of donor cells in tolerant animals without conditioning therapy; (3) MHC appears to have little influence on engraftment efficiency at an early gestational age; (4) a very small number of circulating donor cells in the blood or the tissues is sufficient for the induction and maintenance of tolerance, and (5) the presence of donor cells in the circulating blood is not necessary for prolonged skin graft acceptance or maintenance of permanent skin graft acceptance.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The genetic mechanisms underlying the genesis of low-grade mucosa- associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphomas and their transformation into high-grade lymphoma are poorly understood. p53 inactivation, commonly caused by mutation and allele loss, has been shown to play an important role in the early development and/or the late disease progression of many human tumors including lymphoid malignancies and, thus, may also be important in MALT lymphomagenesis. We examined 75 cases (48 low grade and 27 high grade) of MALT lymphoma for p53 allele loss and mutation as well as protein accumulation. DNA samples prepared from microdissected cell populations were used for the detection of p53 gene abnormalities. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of the gene was detected by polymerase chain reaction-based analysis of p53 CA repeat polymorphism, whereas p53 mutation was studied by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and direct sequencing. p53 expression was assessed by immunostaining with CM1 polyclonal antibody. p53 allele loss and mutation, which resulted in the alteration in the amino acid sequence, were found in both low-grade (LOH, 3 of 44 [6.8%]; mutation, 9 of 48 [18.8%]) and high-grade (LOH, 6 of 21 [28.6%]; mutation, 9 of 27 [33.3%]) MALT lymphomas, particularly in the latter group. p53 staining was not observed in any low-grade tumors but in 6 high-grade cases that harbored missense mutations. There were also differences in the extent of p53 abnormalities, between low- and high- grade tumors. Of the 11 low-grade tumors showing p53 abnormalities, only 1 tumor showed the concomitance of p53 mutation and allele loss, whereas in high-grade tumors, 6 of 9 affected cases displayed both p53 mutation and allele loss. Our results suggest that p53 partial inactivation may play an important role in the development of low-grade MALT lymphomas, whereas complete inactivation may be associated with high-grade transformation.
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The role of zidovudine and other antiretroviral agents in the pathogenesis of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-related lymphomas has been somewhat controversial. In an attempt to elucidate the precise role of antiretroviral agents in the subsequent development of AIDS-related lymphoma, we performed a population-based, case-control study of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-seropositive patients with intermediate- or high-grade lymphoma in Los Angeles County, California, in which information regarding use of antiretroviral medications was ascertained. Diagnostic biopsy material was reviewed to confirm intermediate-or high-grade lymphoma. A structured interview, conducted with all cases and controls, included information about use of zidovudine and other antiretroviral agents. A total of 112 HIV-infected homosexual/bisexual men with lymphoma were matched to 112 homosexual/bisexual men with asymptomatic HIV infection; 49 of the lymphoma cases were also matched to 49 additional controls with AIDS, as defined by conditions other than lymphoma. Positive histories of zidovudine use were reported by 44 (39%) lymphoma cases, 24 (21%) asymptomatic HIV controls, and 21 (42%) AIDS controls. The average duration of zidovudine use up to 12 months before lymphoma diagnosis was 19.0 +/- 13.0 months (mean +/- SD) for the lymphoma cases, 12.6 +/- 10.5 months for the asymptomatic controls, and 11.0 +/- 7.1 months for the AIDS controls. When comparing the 49 HIV-positive lymphoma cases with their 49 matched AIDS controls, all of whom were diagnosed with AIDS during the same time period, the matched relative odds of lymphoma associated with prior use of zidovudine was 0.43 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.17 to 1.12). In comparing all 112 lymphoma cases with 49 AIDS controls, the unmatched relative odds of lymphoma associated with zidovudine use was 0.93 (95% confidence interval = 0.47 to 1.83). One lymphoma case and no AIDS control cases had a history of didanosine use; no lymphoma case or AIDS control cases had taken zalcitabine. We conclude that zidovudine is not associated with an increased risk of development of lymphoma among HIV-infected homosexual or bisexual men.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Binding of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) to normal myeloid cells activates the protein tyrosine kinases Lyn and Syk and results in the immediate early upregulation of G-CSF receptor (R) mRNA. In our studies of the signaling pathways activated by G-CSF that are coupled to proliferation and differentiation of myeloid cells, we examined whether G-CSF activated a latent transcription factor belonging to the STAT protein family. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) of nuclear extracts from G-CSF-stimulated human myeloid cells showed the rapid activation of a DNA-binding protein that bound to the high-affinity serum-inducible element (hSIE) and migrated with mobility similar to serum inducible factor (SIF)-A (Stat3 homodimer). The G-CSF-stimulated SIF-A complex (G-SIF-A) did not bind to duplex oligonucleotides used to purify and characterize other Stat proteins (Stat1–6). In addition, antibodies raised against Stat1–6 failed to supershift the G-SIF-A complex or interfere with its formation. Based on its binding to the hSIE and lack of antigenic cross-reactivity with other known STAT proteins that bind to this element, it is likely that G-SIF-A is composed of a distinct member of the STAT protein family. EMSAs of whole-cell extracts prepared from cell lines containing full- length and truncated mutants of the G-CSFR showed that activation of G- SIF-A did not correlate with proliferation; rather, optimal activation requires the distal half of the cytosolic domain of the G-CSFR that is essential for differentiation. Activation of G-SIF-A, therefore, may be an early G-CSFR-coupled event that is critical for myeloid maturation.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Embryonic hematopoiesis is initiated in part in the blood islands of the yolk sac. Previous confocal microscopic analysis has shown that the CD34 antigen, a mucin-like cell surface glycoprotein that is expressed by hematopoietic progenitors and all endothelial cells of the adult and embryo, is also found on a subset of luminal hematopoietic-like cells in the yolk sac blood islands as well as on the vascular endothelium lining these early hematopoietic locations. We show here that, as in all other hematopoietic sites thus far examined, immunoaffinity- purified CD34+ nonadherent cells from murine yolk sacs contain the vast majority of erythroid and myeloid progenitor cell colony forming activity. To examine the developmental interactions between these CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells of the yolk sac and the CD34+ yolk sac endothelium, we have immunaffinity-purified adherent endothelial cells from day 10.5 yolk sacs using CD34 antiserum and produced cell lines by transformation with a retrovirus expressing the polyoma middle T antigen. Analysis of these cell lines for CD34, von Willebrand's factor, FLK 1 and FLT 1 expression, and capillary growth in Matrigel indicates that they appear to be endothelial cells, consistent with their original phenotype in vivo. Coculture of yolk sac CD34+ hematopoietic cells on these endothelial cell lines results in up to a 60-fold increase in total hematopoietic cell number after approximately 8 days. Analysis of these expanded hematopoietic cells showed that the majority were of the monocyte/macrophage lineage. In addition, examination of the cultures showed the rapid formation of numerous cobblestone areas, a previously described morphologic entity thought to be representative of early pluripotential stem cells. Scrutiny of the ability of these endothelial cell lines to expand committed progenitor cells showed up to a sixfold increase in erythroid and myeloid colony- forming cells after 3 to 6 days in culture, consistent with the notion that these embryonic endothelial cells mediate the expansion of these precursor cells. Polymerase chain reaction analyses showed that most of the cell lines produce FLK-2/FLT-3 ligand, stem cell factor, macrophage colony-stimulating factor, leukemia-inhibitory factor, and interleukin- 6 (IL-6), whereas there is a generally low or not measurable production of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, granulocyte-macrophage colony- stimulating factor, IL-1, IL-3, transforming growth factor beta-1, erythropoietin, or thrombopoietin. The output of mature hematopoietic cells from these cocultures can be modified to include an erythroid population by the addition of exogenous erythropoietin. These data suggest that endothelial cell lines derived form the yolk sac provide an appropriate hematopoietic environment for the expansion and differentiation of yolk sac progenitor cells into at least the myeloid and erythroid lineages.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Individuals with severe forms of congenital neutropenia suffer from recurrent infections. The therapeutic use of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) to increase the neutrophil count is associated with fewer infections and an improved quality of life. However, the long-term effects of this new therapy are largely unknown. In particular, it is unclear if myeloid leukemia, a known complication of some forms of congenital neutropenia, will occur with increased frequency among patients who receive long-term treatment with hematopoietic growth factors. We report 13 patients with congenital disorders of myelopoiesis who developed leukemic transformation with either myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) and 1 who acquired a clonal cytogenetic abnormality without evidence of MDS or AML while receiving rhG-CSF. The bone marrows of 10 patients showed monosomy 7 and 5 had activating RAS mutations. These abnormalities were not detected in pretreatment bone marrows and cessation of rhG-CSF was not associated with either clinical improvement or cytogenetic remission. We conclude that patients with severe forms of congenital neutropenia are at relatively high risk of developing MDS and AML. The occurrence of monosomy 7 and RAS mutations in these cases suggests that the myeloid progenitors of some patients are genetically predisposed to malignant transformation. The relationship between therapeutic rhG-CSF and leukemogenesis in patients with severe chronic neutropenia is unclear.
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The use of peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) to reconstitute hematopoiesis after high-dose chemoradiotherapy is now commonplace in the treatment of malignancies. Attempts to characterize these cells have concentrated primarily on their phenotype and their content of clonogenic colony-forming cells (CFC). We have used a plastic-adherent delta (P delta) assay system to evaluate the quantity and quality of more primitive cells in addition to the conventional measurements of CFC and CD34-positive cells. The leukapheresis products from 20 patients mobilized using cyclophosphamide (Cy) and granulocyte colony- stimulating factor (G-CSF) were examined for progenitor cell content. The mean number of mononuclear cells (MNC), colony-forming units- granulocyte/macrophage (CFU-GM), and CD34-positive cells from two leukaphereses per patients were 7.9 x 10(8)/kg, 47.3 x 10(4)/kg, and 10.5 x 10(6)/kg, respectively. The mean number of P delta progenitors was 9.3 x 10(4)/kg. Limiting dilution analyses showed the frequency of P delta progenitors in PBPC to be between 1 and 5.3 per 10(5) MNC and that each P delta progenitor has the proliferative capability to generate an overall mean of 4.5 CFU-GM. Of the 20 patients, 16 underwent autografting with PBPC alone. Fifteen patients engrafted neutrophils and platelets within 16 days. One patient had delayed engraftment associated with inadequate etoposide clearance. Statistical analysis showed a strong correlation between numbers of CFU-GM and CD34 positivity. The numbers of plastic-adherent P delta progenitor cells did not correlate with CFU-GM or CD34-positive cells. We conclude that the plastic-adherent P delta progenitor cell assay is capable of measuring primitive hematopoietic cells and that it may be useful for the investigation of primitive progenitors in PBPC harvests.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: DNA constructs encoding BCR/ABL P210 have been introduced into the mouse germ line using microinjection of one-cell fertilized eggs. Kinetics of BCR/ABL P210 expression in transgenic mice were very similar to those of BCR/ABL P190 constructs in transgenic mice. mRNA transcripts were detectable early in embryonic development and also in hematopoietic tissue of adult animals. Expression of BCR/ABL in peripheral blood preceded development of overt disease. P210 founder and progeny transgenic animals, when becoming ill, developed leukemia of B, T-lymphoid, or myeloid origin after a relatively long latency period. In contrast, P190-transgenic mice exclusively developed leukemia of B-cell origin, with a relatively short period of latency. The observed dissimilarities are most likely due to intrinsically different properties of the P190 and P210 oncoproteins and may also involve sequences that control transgene expression. The delayed progression of BCR/ABL P210-associated disease in the transgenic mice is consistent with the apparent indolence of human chronic myeloid leukemia during the chronic phase. We conclude that, in transgenic models, comparable expression of BCR/ABL P210 and BCR/ABL P190 results in clinically distinct conditions.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The effect of the arotinoid mofarotene (Ro 40–8757; 4-[2-[p-[(E)- 2(5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-5,5,8,8-tetramethyl-2-naphthyl)- propenyl]phenoxy]ethyl]morpholine) on stromal cell-mediated hematopoiesis was examined in murine long-term bone marrow cultures. Whether added at week 2 to regenerating cultures or at week 4 to plateau-phase cultures, mofarotene strongly inhibited total cell production in a dose-dependent manner. Progenitor cell production was also inhibited, but to a lesser extent. When added at the initiation of culture, 1 mumol/L mofarotene did not affect formation of the adherent layer, but production of total nucleated cells and progenitors was inhibited over the next 10 weeks by 95% and 96%, respectively. However, after mofarotene treatment ceased, progenitor cell levels began increasing immediately, and cell production reached plateau levels comparable with those of control cultures within 4 weeks. Hematopoiesis was maintained for 14 more weeks, indicating that long-term culture- initiating cells survived the treatment. Assays of spleen colony- forming units (CFU-S) in the adherent layers showed an enrichment of day-13 CFU-S relative to the more mature day-9 CFU-S. Mofarotene did not inhibit colony formation by bone marrow cells stimulated by exogenous growth factors and did not decrease production of growth factors by stromal cells in the cultures, as determined by functional assays and by mRNA levels. These results suggest that mofarotene blocks differentiation of very primitive progenitors, inhibiting production of more mature hematopoietic elements.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN; or Kostmann syndrome) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by a maturation arrest of myelopoiesis at the level of promyelocytes. Myeloid precursor cells from patients with SCN require pharmacological dosages of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (r-metHuG-CSF; Filgrastim; Amgen, Thousand Oaks, CA) to differentiate to normal neutrophils. Thus, it is hypothesized that the underlying defect responsible for SCN is based on an abnormal G-CSF-induced signal transduction pathway. Because JAK2, a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase, is involved in the signaling pathway of G-CSF, we examined the expression and activity of JAK2 in neutrophils from SCN patients during r-metHuG-CSF treatment. The immunoprecipitated JAK2 protein showed increased tyrosine phosphorylation in neutrophils from SCN patients as compared with that in neutrophils from healthy donors, suggesting that this kinase is activated. In vitro kinase assays of immunoprecipitated JAK2 confirmed that neutrophils from SCN patients show an increased autophosphorylation of JAK2 in comparison with that of neutrophils from healthy volunteers. These findings suggest that JAK2 is activated in SCN patients.
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Hematopoiesis first arises in the extraembryonic yolk sac, and it is generally believed that yolk sac-derived stem cells migrate and seed the fetal liver at approximately week 6 of development in humans. Recently, the identification at day 8.5 to 9 of multipotential stem cells in intraembryonic sites different from the liver suggests that the establishment of hematopoiesis might be more complex than initially believed. In an attempt to understand initial steps of hematopoiesis during human ontogeny, we characterized clonogenic myeloid progenitor cells in human yolk sacs and corresponding embryos at 25 to 50 days of development. Most erythroid colonies derived from the yolk sacs differed from adult marrow-derived progenitors in that they also contained cells of the granulomacrophagic lineage, suggesting that they were pluripotent and exhibited a different response to cytokines. Furthermore, a subclass of nonerythroid progenitors generated very large granulomacrophagic colonies, some of which generated secondary erythroid colonies on replating. Analysis of the distribution of progenitors revealed that in contrast to erythroid progenitors, whose numbers were equally distributed between the yolk sac and the embryo, 80% of the nonerythroid progenitors were found in the embryo at stages II and III. Interestingly, a high proportion of nonerythroid progenitors (including high proliferative potential cells) was present in colony assays initiated with cells remaining after the liver has been removed. These findings were validated in colony assays established with CD34+ cells purified from extraembryonic yolk sacs and intraembryonic tissues. Increased knowledge about the biology of hematopoietic stem cells early in life may help to further understanding of the mechanisms associated with the restriction in proliferative and differentiative potential observed in the adult hematopoietic stem cell compartment.
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: IgG alloantibodies to polymorphic platelet glycoproteins (GPs) are known to be responsible for severe thrombocytopenia in the neonate and after transfusion. Platelet GPIIIa can have either a leucine or a proline at residue 33. The most immunogenic platelet alloantigen in thrombocytopenia is the leucine 33 form of GPIIIa. Here, we have generated human monoclonal antibody fragments that are specific for the leucine and not the proline form of GPIIIa and can inhibit the binding of polyclonal human IgG alloantibodies to GPIIIa leucine 33 on platelets. The antibody fragments were selected from a library of single chain Fv fragments displayed on the surface of filamentous phage. The VH gene repertoire was derived from the peripheral blood lymphocytes of an alloimmunized individual and recombined with a VL gene repertoire from a nonimmune source. Antibodies such as these, which are able to distinguish between two variant forms of a native antigen and which have been unobtainable by conventional hybridoma technology, have both diagnostic and potential therapeutic applications.
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The frequent occurrence of BCL2-IgH rearrangements in follicular lymphoma (FL) makes detection of low numbers of tumor cells possible by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The presence of BCL2-IgH in the bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood of many FL patients at the time of autografting has led to the suggestion that selection of the CD34- enriched fraction may lead to reinfusion of lower numbers of tumor cells. To address this issue, we PCR-amplified BCL2-IgH from fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS)-purified BM CD34+ and CD34- fractions in seven FL patients showing a PCR-detectable translocation in the major breakpoint region of BCL2, five of which showed morphological BM involvement. The total CD34+ fraction showed diminished but residual positivity in the first two cases tested. Therefore, BM cells from the remaining five patients were sorted for the CD34+19- immature population, the CD34+19+ B-cell precursors, and the CD34–19+ mature B-cell fraction. The CD34+19- subpopulation was negative in four of five, despite evident BM infiltration in three cases. In contrast, the CD34+19+ fraction was positive in all three cases tested. These cells represented 0% to 50% (mean, 18%) of the total CD34+ population, suggesting that, if reinfusion of BCL2-IgH- positive cells plays a role in postautograft relapse in FL, therapeutic CD34 selection procedures should include additional purging of the CD34+19+ B-cell precursors or, at least, assessment of the proportion of CD19+ cells in the CD34+ fraction and its correlation with clinical outcome postreinfusion.
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: A retrospective study compared posttransplant engraftment parameters in 203 patients with myelofibrosis (MF) with those in a population of 203 matched controls without MF. There were no significant differences between these groups in the proportions of patients who died without achieving engraftment and in the disease-free survival distributions. Furthermore, comparisons between the two groups of patients reaching the respective endpoints showed no differences in the time distributions for reaching 0.5 or 1.0 x 10(9)/L granulocytes, but the time to platelet transfusion independence was 3 days longer in patients with MF. In further analysis, results for 33 patients with severe MF were compared with those of their respective controls. The proportions of patients with severe MF who died without reaching these engraftment endpoints and the disease-free survival distributions in the two groups were similar. Among patients who reached the respective engraftment endpoints, there was no statistically significant difference in the pace of granulocyte recovery. In patients with severe MF, there was a 7- day delay in the time to reach platelet transfusion independence and a 2-day delay in the time to reach red blood cell independence, but the differences were not statistically significant. The present results do not substantiate concerns raised by earlier studies. MF may delay the time to reach platelet independence by approximately 3 days and may increase platelet transfusion requirements, but no other perturbation of hematopoietic reconstitution was apparent.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Megakaryocyte growth and development factor (MGDF) is a potent inducer of megakaryopoiesis in vitro and thrombopoiesis in vivo. The effects of MGDF appear to be lineage-selective, making this cytokine an ideal candidate for use in alleviating clinically relevant thrombocytopenias. This report describes a murine model of life-threatening thrombocytopenia that results from the combination treatment of carboplatin and sublethal irradiation. Mortality of this regimen is 94% and is associated with widespread internal bleeding. The daily administration of pegylated recombinant human MGDF (PEG-rMGDF) significantly reduced mortality (to 〈 15%) and ameliorated the depth and duration of thrombocytopenia. The severity of leucopenia and anemia was also reduced, although it was not clear whether these effects were direct. Platelets generated in response to PEG-rMGDF were morphologically indistinguishable from normal platelets. PEG-rMGDF administered in combination with murine granulocyte colony-stimulating factor completely prevented mortality and further reduced leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. These data support the concept that PEG-rMGDF may be useful to treat iatrogenic thrombocytopenias.
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria is an acquired hemolytic anemia associated with somatic mutations in the X-linked gene PIG-A, which encodes a protein involved in the biosynthesis of glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchors. To further elucidate the molecular basis of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, we have worked out a systematic and relatively rapid methodology to scan for mutations in the entire coding region of the PIG-A gene. By this methodology, we have identified 15 different somatic mutations in 12 patients. The mutations were spread throughout the entire PIG-A-coding region. Of the mutations, 10 caused frameshifts, 6 caused small deletions, 3 caused small insertions, and 1 caused deletion-insertion. Five single base pair substitutions caused three missense mutations, one nonsense mutation, and one defect in the donor splice site of intron 4. In each of 3 patients, two independent mutations were identified. The predominance of frameshift mutations may reflect selection for somatic mutations giving rise to clones with a completely nonfunctional PIG-A protein.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Compared with hetastarch (HS), the low molecular weight analog pentastarch (PS) has been reported to be equally effective for granulocyte collection by centrifugal leukapheresis, to result in fewer adverse donor reactions (ADR), and to have a more rapid elimination profile. We prospectively compared the granulocyte collection efficiency (GCE), granulocyte yield, and ADR in 72 randomly paired granulocytapheresis procedures from 36 volunteer donors using the model CS-3000 Plus Blood Cell Separator (CS) and either PS or HS as the sedimenting agent. Paired collections from each donor allowed us to compare the two agents directly while controlling for intrinsic donor differences. In 33 of 36 (92%) donors, HS procedures were significantly more efficient than PS procedures (P 〈 .001). As an average, HS collections yielded 2.3 +/- 0.67 x 10(10) granulocytes at 58% +/- 8.8% GCE, whereas PS procedures resulted in 1.4 +/- 0.76 x 10(10) granulocytes at 33% +/- 15% GCE. No starch-induced ADR were seen with either agent. For granulocyte harvests using the CS, (1) in most donors, using HS as the red blood cell sedimenting agent during centrifugal leukapheresis results in significantly higher (nearly twofold) GCE and larger granulocyte yields in comparison with using PS, (2) ADR were not observed with either agent, and (3) the potential benefit of more rapid PS elimination should be balanced against significantly lower granulocyte yields.
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1 (TIMP-1), the major physiological matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor and a potent antimetastatic factor, also stimulates the growth of erythroid progenitors (erythroid-potentiating activity). We analyzed the relationship between the growth factor activity and protease inhibition by preparing purified TIMP-1 “knockout” proteins lacking in vitro antiproteolytic activity. The growth-stimulatory effect of these N- terminal TIMP-1 point mutants, as tested in an in vitro assay using erythroid precursors (erythroid burst-forming units) was equal to that of unmutated TIMP-1. A fully antiproteolytic C-terminal TIMP-1 truncation also stimulated growth in the erythroid burst-forming unit assay. The results indicate that the influence of TIMP-1 on erythroid precursor growth is independent of its ability to inhibit metalloproteinases. TIMP-1 is analogous to proteins that have both proteolytic and growth factor activity, such as plasmin, thrombin, and urokinase. However, TIMP-1 is novel in this regard because it is a metalloproteinase inhibitor. We show that the antiproteolytic and growth factor activities of the TIMP-1 molecule are physically and functionally distinct.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: The incidence and severity of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic transplantation using peripheral blood progenitor cells mobilized by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) appear to be no worse than those after bone marrow transplantation, despite the presence of large numbers of T cells in the donor infusion. Experimental studies have shown that type-1 T cells (secreting interleukin-2 [IL-2] and interferon-gamma) mediate acute GVHD, whereas type-2 T cells (secreting IL-4 and IL-10) can prevent acute GVHD. We tested the hypothesis that G-CSF modulates T-cell function toward a type-2 response and thus reduces the severity of acute GVHD. B6 mice were injected with G-CSF or diluent for 4 days, and their splenic T cells were stimulated in vitro with alloantigen or mitogen in the absence of G-CSF. T cells from G-CSF-treated mice showed a significant increase in IL-4 production, with a simultaneous decrease in IL-2 and interferon-gamma production in response to both stimuli. We also examined the effect of G-CSF pretreatment of donors in a GVHD model (B6- -〉B6D2F1). Survival was significantly improved in recipients of G-CSF- treated donors. Concanavalin-A-induced cytokine production at day 13 after transplantation also showed an increase in IL-4 along with a decrease in IL-2 and IFN-gamma production by splenocytes from recipients of G-CSF-treated bone marrow and T cells. These data show that pretreatment of donors with G-CSF polarizes donor T cells toward the production of type-2 cytokines, which is associated with reduced type-1 cytokine production and reduced severity of acute GVHD.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Because hematopoietic cells express multiple Fc gamma receptor isoforms, the role of the individual Fc gamma receptors in phagocytosis has been difficult to define. Transfection of Fc gamma receptors into COS-1 cells, which lack endogeneous Fc gamma receptors but have phagocytic potential, has proved valuable for the study of individual Fc gamma receptor function. Using this model system, we have established that a single class of human Fc gamma receptor mediates phagocytosis in the absence of other Fc receptors and that isoforms from each Fc gamma receptor class mediate phagocytosis, although the requirements for phagocytosis differ. In investigating the relationship between structure and function for Fc gamma receptor mediated phagocytosis, the importance of the cytoplasmic tyrosines of the receptor or its associated gamma chain has been established. For example, two cytoplasmic YXXL sequences, in a configuration similar to the conserved tyrosine-containing motif found in Ig gene family receptors, are important for phagocytosis by the human Fc gamma receptor, Fc gamma RIIA. Fc gamma RI and Fc gamma RIIIA do not possess cytoplasmic tyrosines but transmit a phagocytic signal through interaction with an associated gamma subunit that contains two YXXL sequences in a conserved motif required for phagocytosis. The human Fc gamma RII isoforms Fc gamma RIIB1 and Fc gamma RIIB2 do not induce phagocytosis and have only a single YXXL sequence. Cross-linking the phagocytic Fc gamma receptors induces tyrosine phosphorylation of either Fc gamma RIIA or the gamma chain, and treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors reduces both phagocytosis and phosphorylation of the receptor tyrosine residues. Activation of protein tyrosine kinases follows Fc gamma receptor engagement of IgG-coated cells. The data indicate that coexpression of the protein tyrosine kinase Syk, which is associated with the gamma chain in monocytes/macrophages, is important for phagocytosis mediated by Fc gamma RI and Fc gamma RIIIA. Furthermore, phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase is required for phagocytosis mediated by Fc gamma RIIA as well as for phagocytosis mediated by Fc gamma RI/gamma and Rc gamma RIIIA/gamma.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), which is the most common cause of acute renal failure in infants and small children, is caused by verotoxin (VT)-producing Escherichia coli infection. Endothelial injury determines microvascular thrombosis and evidence is available from recent studies that suggests that leukocyte activation participates in endothelial damage. We studied here the effect of VT-1 on leukocyte adhesion to vascular endothelium under physiologic flow conditions. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were incubated for 24 hours with VT-1 (0.1, 1, and 10 pmol/L) and then exposed to a total leukocyte suspension in a parallel plate flow chamber under laminar flow conditions (1.5 dynes/cm2). Adherent cells were counted by digital image processing. Results showed that VT-1 dose-dependently increased the number of adhering leukocytes to HUVECs as compared with unstimulated cells. The adhesive response elicited by VT-1 was comparable to that of interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), one of the most potent inducers of endothelial cell adhesiveness. Exposure of HUVECs to VT-1 did not affect the number of rolling leukocytes, which was similar to that of control values. To examine the role of adhesion molecules in VT-1-induced leukocyte adhesion, HUVECs were incubated with mouse monoclonal antibodies against E-selectin, intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) before adhesion assay. Functional blocking of E-selectin, ICAM-1, and VCAM-1 on endothelial cells significantly inhibited VT-1-induced increase in leukocyte adhesion. In some experiments, before VT-1 incubation, HUVECs were pretreated for 24 hours with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha; 100 U/mL), which is known to increase VT receptor expression on HUVECs. The number of adhering leukocytes on HUVECs exposed to TNF alpha and VT-1 significantly increased as compared with HUVECs incubated with VT-1 and TNF alpha alone. These results suggest that VT-1 modulates leukocyte-endothelium interaction, thus increasing leukocyte adhesion and upregulating adhesive proteins on endothelial surface membrane.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: We investigated the inhibitory activity of nerve growth factor (NGF) on apoptosis of rat peritoneal mast cells (PMCs) and compared it with that of recombinant stem cell factor (rSCF), which is a mast cell growth factor. When PMCs were incubated up to 72 hours in the presence of control medium, internucleosomal fragmentation of DNA indicating apoptosis was detected by agarose gel electrophoresis and flow cytometry. The aged PMCs showed morphological changes typical for apoptosis, such as chromatin condensation and loss of microvilli of the cell membrane. Addition of NGF or rSCF prevented development of the characteristic DNA fragmentation and decreased the proportion of apoptotic cells with low DNA content values in a dose-dependent manner. Polyclonal antibody to NGF completely abolished the inhibitory activity of NGF but not of rSCF. NGF-induced PMCs were in the G0/G1 phase of the cell cycle, but rSCF transited them from the G0/G1 phase to the S/G2M phase, suggesting that NGF, unlike rSCF, may have no proliferation activity to PMCs. By flow cytometric analysis with antibodies to NGF receptors p75LNGFR and p140trk, we defined that PMCs expressed p140trk but not p75LNGFR. Addition of herbimycin A or K-252a, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, to NGF resulted in blockage of the NGF-induced p140trk phosphorylation and restriction of the inhibitory activity of NGF on apoptosis of PMCs. These results indicated that NGF suppressed apoptosis of rat PMCs through the p140trk tyrosine phosphorylation and possessed no proliferative activity. Thus, NGF may act as a key factor to promote survival of connective tissue-type mast cells.
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: To define an optimal regimen for mobilizing and collecting peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) for use in allogeneic transplantation, we evaluated the kinetics of mobilization by filgrastim (recombinant met- human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor [r-metHuG-CSF]) in normal volunteers. Filgrastim was injected subcutaneously for up to 10 days at a dose of 3 (n = 10), 5 (n = 5), or 10 micrograms/kg/d (n = 15). A subset of volunteers from each dose cohort underwent a 7L leukapheresis on study day 6 (after 5 days of filgrastim). Granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming cell (GM-CFC) numbers in the blood were maximal after 5 days of filgrastim; a broader peak was evident for CD34+ cells between days 4 and 6. The 95% confidence intervals (CI) for mean number of PBPC per milliliter of blood in the three dose cohorts overlapped on each study day. However, on the peak day, CD34+ cells were significantly higher in the 10 micrograms/kg/d cohort than in a pool of the 3 and 5 micrograms/kg/d cohorts. Mobilization was not significantly influenced by volunteer age or sex. Leukapheresis products obtained at the 10 micrograms/kg/d dose level contained a median GM-CFC number of 93 x 10(4)/kg (range, 50 x 10(4)/kg to 172 x 10(4)/kg). Collections from volunteers receiving lower doses of filgrastim contained a median GM- CFC number of 36 x 10(4)/kg (range, 5 x 10(4)/kg to 204 x 10(4)/kg). The measurement of CD34+ cells per milliliter of blood on the day of leukapheresis predicted the total yield of PBPC in the leukapheresis product (r = .87, P 〈 .0001). Assuming a minimum GM-CFC requirement of 50 x 10(4)/kg (based on our experience with autologous PBPC transplantation), all seven leukapheresis products obtained at the 10 micrograms/kg/d dose level were potentially sufficient for allogeneic transplantation purposes. We conclude that in normal donors, filgrastim 10 micrograms/kg/d for 5 days with a single leukapheresis on the following day is a highly effective regimen for PBPC mobilization and collection. Further studies are required to determine whether PBPC collected with this regimen reliably produce rapid and sustained engraftment in allogeneic recipients.
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 1995-12-15
    Description: Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) converting enzyme (ICE) is a cysteine protease that specifically cleaves precursor IL-1 beta to its biologically active form. Recent studies have also implicated ICE in the induction of apoptosis in vertebrate cells. Because IL-1 plays a major role in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) blast proliferation, we sought to investigate the effect of ICE inhibition on AML progenitors. To do this, we used bocaspartyl (benzyl) chloromethylketone (BACMK) an inhibitor designed to penetrate cells and bind covalently to the active site of ICE. Our preliminary experiments showed that incubation of activated peripheral blood cells with 2.5 mumol/L of BAMCK downregulated production of mature IL-1 beta but had no effect on tumor necrosis factor-alpha. To test the effects of the inhibitor on AML cells, we first used the OCI/AML3 cell line. We found that these cells produce IL-1 beta and bind the biotinylated cytokine and that IL-1 inhibitors, such as IL-1 neutralizing antibodies, IL-1 receptor antagonist, and soluble IL-1 receptors, specifically inhibit OCI/AML3 proliferation, indicating that IL-1 beta is an autocrine growth factor for OCI/AML3 cells. The ICE inhibitor suppressed OCI/AML3 growth in a dose-dependent manner (at 0.4 to 4 mumol/L) and downregulated mature IL- 1 beta production, as assessed by Western immunoblotting. Similar results were obtained with marrow aspirates from 16 AML patients. The ICE inhibitor suppressed proliferation of AML precursors (by up to 78%; mean, 44%) in a dose-dependent fashion at concentrations ranging from 0.4 to 5 mumol/L but not proliferation of normal marrow progenitors; the suppressive effect was reversed by IL-1 beta. Furthermore, incubation of AML cells with 4 mumol/L BAMCK downregulated the production of mature IL-1 beta, suggesting that the growth-inhibitory effect is mediated through suppression of the biologically active cytokine. Our data indicate that inhibition of ICE suppresses AML blast proliferation and suggest that ICE inhibitors may have a role in future therapies for AML.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The release of secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) into the mammalian circulation may contribute to the development of hemorrhagic and inflammatory diseases. sPLA2 has previously been shown to alter the behavior of platelets, leukocytes, and endothelial cells, although the molecular basis for these cellular effects has not been established. Our studies indicate that the inhibition of platelet aggregation by snake, bee venom, and pancreatic sPLA2 is dependent on a plasma cofactor. This cofactor resides within the lipoprotein fraction of plasma, with 54%, 31%, and 11% of the activity present in the high- density lipoprotein (HDL), low-density lipoprotein (LDL), and very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) fractions, respectively. Delipidation of HDL and LDL was associated with the complete loss of platelet-inhibitory activity. Incubation of purified sPLA2 with the HDL fraction of plasma resulted in the time-dependent generation of lysophosphatidylcholine (lysoPC). The formation of lysoPC correlated with the inhibition of platelet aggregation. Purified lysoPC (10 to 100 micrograms/mL) inhibited platelet aggregation and dense granule release induced by thrombin (0.05 U/mL), collagen (1 micrograms/mL), ionophore A23187 (2 mumol/L), ADP (12.5 mumol/L), and adrenaline (3.2 mumol/L). The inhibition of platelet aggregation by lysoPC was dose-dependent and correlated with decreased fibrinogen binding to glycoprotein IIb-IIIa. Our studies indicate that the enzymatic generation of lysoPC from plasma lipoproteins is essential for the sPLA2-mediated inhibition of platelet activation in the presence of albumin. These results raise the possibility that the toxic effects of circulating sPLA2 may be due in part to the generation of the bioactive lysophospholipid, lysoPC.
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: To determine if in utero transplantation could restore the immune system of mice with a severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) disorder, C57BL/6Sz-scid/scid fetuses were injected on day 14/15 of gestation with adult congenic donor bone marrow (BM) cells. Congenic BM engrafted in one of eight (13%) recipients. Reconstitution of both lymphoid and nonlymphoid lineages was observed. In vitro and in vivo T-cell function was documented. Stem cells were shown to have engrafted by secondary transfer studies. When fully allogeneic C57BL/6 (H-2b) or B10.BR (H-2k) adult. BM cells were given to C.B-17-scid/scid (H-2d) fetal recipients, 15 of 54 (28%) recipients had evidence of engraftment, with up to 76% of peripheral blood (PB) being of in utero donor BM origin on day 131 postnatally. In all mice with persistent leukocyte engraftment, T- and B-lymphoid cells were entirely of donor origin. Donor T cells were tolerant to host but not third party alloantigens as measured in vitro. In vivo, T-cell function appeared intact. Although most mice had lower levels of B-cell engraftment than T-cell engraftment, mice with 〉 or = 10% B cells were able to produce normal levels of IgM. Despite transplantation of fully allogeneic BM cells, stem cell engraftment could be demonstrated by secondary transfer of BM cells into lethally irradiated recipients that were congenic to the original in utero donor BM source. These data indicate that adult BM cells, even those fully allogeneic with the fetal recipient, can give rise to progeny with multilineage potential, which leads to restoration of T-cell and B-cell function.
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The response of normal and chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), CD34+ cells to human macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha or LD78) was assessed. In tritiated thymidine incorporation assays, stem cell factor plus granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor stimulated thymidine incorporation in normal CD34+ cells was reduced to 72% of control values in the presence of MIP-1 alpha, whereas incorporation by CML CD34+ cells exposed to the same factors was not altered. In clonogenic assays, the presence of MIP-1 alpha gave a level of colony formation that was 71% of control values for normal progenitor cells, whereas for CML CD34+ cells colony formation was enhanced by 25%. These results suggest that, in vitro, CML progenitor cells are relatively refractory to the growth inhibitory effects of MIP-1 alpha. Using flow cytometry, the specific binding of a biotinylated human MIP-1 alpha/avidin fluorescein (FITC) conjugate to normal and CML mononuclear and CD34+ cell populations was quantified. The data indicate that (for both normal and CML CD34+ cells) there was a single population of cells that express cell surface receptors for MIP-1 alpha and this receptor expression was independent of cell cycle status. CML progenitor cells may be refractory to the effects of MIP-1 alpha as a result of events downstream from receptor expression.
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Integrins represent a candidate group of cell surface receptors that may control the homing and population of the thymus by T-cell precursors and the subsequent migration of developing thymocytes through the thymic architecture. We have used multiparameter flow cytometric methods to characterize the expression of several members of the integrin family (alpha 3 beta 1, alpha 4 beta 1, alpha 5 beta 1, alpha 6 beta 1, and alpha L beta 2) on thymocyte subpopulations and have correlated integrin expression with other well-defined thymocyte differentiation markers. alpha 4 beta 1 was expressed by all thymocytes, but expression was highest on CD4-CD8- double-negative (DN) cells, high on CD+CD8+ double-positive (DP) cells, and lowest on mature single-positive (SP) cells, alpha 3 beta 1, alpha 5 beta 1, and alpha 6 beta 1 were present on 13%, 63%, and 26% of thymocytes, respectively, with maximal levels of expression on DN and SP cells, and low levels of expression on DP cells. Simultaneous analysis of alpha 4 beta 1, alpha 5 beta 1, and CD3 expression suggested a pathway of T-cell differentiation in the thymus in which the majority of the DN cells were alpha 4 beta 1hi alpha 5 beta 1hi, the DP cells alpha 4 beta 1hi alpha 5 beta 1lo/-, and the most mature SP cells were alpha 4 beta 1int. The stage-specific expression of integrins strongly implies their functional involvement during T-cell maturation in the thymus.
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Mutant mice with splenomegaly and nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia were found in an inbred colony of the CBA/N (hereafter CBA) strain maintained in the Japan SLC Haruno farm (Shuchi-gun, Shizuoka, Japan). The activity of pyruvate kinase (PK) in red blood cells (RBCs) of the anemic mutants decreased to 16.2% of normal (+/+) CBA mice. Because the mutant CBA mice showed a remarkable reticulocytosis (41.6%) and because the PK activity of reticulocytes is much higher than that of mature RBCs, the PK activity in mature RBCs of the mutant CBA mice was calculated to be 2.8% that of mature RBCs of CBA-(+/+) mice. Because RBC type PK is encoded by the Pk-1 locus of the mouse (chromosome 3), we designated the mutant locus as Pk-1slc. The anemia and PK deficiency of CBA-Pk-1slc/Pk-1slc mice were cured by bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from CBA-(+/+) mice. Prior irradiation was not necessary for the curative BMT. On the other hand, the BMT from CBA-Pk-1slc/Pk-1slc mice to nonirradiated CBA-(+/+) mice did not result in the decrease of RBCs and the reduction of PK activity. The present results indicate that CBA- Pk-1slc/Pk-1slc mice are a potentially useful animal model for studying pathophysiology of PK deficiency and for developing new therapeutic methods to correct PK deficiency.
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: In a previous study we have shown that monoclonal antibody F1 (MoAb F1), directed against an epitope on the heavy chain of factor XII distinct from the binding site for anionic surfaces, is able to activate factor XII in plasma (Nuijens JH, et al: J Biol Chem 264; 12941, 1989). Here, we studied in detail the mechanism underlying the activation of factor XII by MoAb F1 using purified proteins. Formation of factor XIIa was assessed by measuring its amidolytic activity towards the chromogenic substrate H-D-Pro-Phe-Arg-pNA (S-2302) in the presence of soybean trypsin inhibitor and by assessing cleavage on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Upon incubation with MoAb F1 alone, factor XII was auto-activated in a time-dependent fashion, activation being maximal after 30 hours. Factor XII incubated in the absence of MoAb F1 was hardly activated by kallikrein, whereas in the presence of MoAb F1, but not in that of a control MoAb, the rate of factor XII activation by kallikrein was promoted at least 60-fold. Maximal activation of factor XII with kallikrein in the presence of MoAb F1 was reached within 1 hour. This effect of kallikrein on the cleavage of factor XII bound to MoAb F1 was specific because the fibrinolytic enzymes plasmin, urokinase, and tissue-type plasminogen activator could not substitute for kallikrein. Also, trypsin could easily activate factor XII, but in contrast to kallikrein, this activation was independent of MoAb F1. SDS-PAGE analysis showed that the appearance of amidolytic activity correlated well with cleavage of factor XII. MoAb F1-induced activation of factor XII in this purified system was not dependent on the presence of high- molecular-weight kininogen (HK), in contrast to the activation of the contact system in plasma by MoAb F1. Experiments with deletion mutants revealed that the epitopic region for MoAb F1 on factor XII is located on the kringle domain. Thus, this study shows that binding of ligands to the kringle domain, which does not contribute to the proposed binding site for negatively charged surfaces, may induce activation of factor XII. Therefore, these findings point to the existence of multiple mechanisms of activation of factor XII.
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: B-cell precursor (BCP) leukemia is the most common form of childhood cancer and represents one of the most radiation-resistant forms of human malignancy. In this study, we examined the antileukemic efficacy of the B43 (anti-CD19)-pokeweed antiviral protein (B43-PAP) immunotoxin against radiation-resistant BCP leukemia cells. B43-PAP caused apoptosis of radiation-resistant primary BCP leukemia cells, killed greater than 99% of radiation-resistant primary leukemic progenitor cells from BCP leukemia patients, and conferred extended survival to severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice xenografted with radiation- resistant human BCP leukemia. Furthermore, the combination of B43-PAP and total body irradiation (TBI) was more effective than TBI alone in two SCID mouse bone marrow transplantation models of radiation- resistant human BCP leukemia. Thus, B43-PAP may prove useful in the treatment of radiation-resistant BCP leukemia.
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: A new pharmacologic agent, anti-CD3F(ab')2-ricin toxin A chain (RTA), was synthesized for the purpose of targeting T cells and as a means of treating established graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The Fc region of anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (MoAb) was removed to prevent its ability to activate T cells. The resulting F(ab')2 fragments were conjugated to deglycosylated RTA (dgRTA), a catalytic and potent phytotoxin. The resulting immunotoxin (IT) was potent (greater than 95% inhibition) and selective in inhibiting T-cell mitogenesis in vitro. In vivo, the IT depleted 80% of T cells in mice receiving bone marrow (BM) transplants. Transplantation in an aggressive acute GVHD model using C57BL/6 donor cells and H-2 disparate B10.BR recipients resulted in an infiltration of CD3-expressing cells and a median survival time (MST) of 20 to 30 days. A 5-day course of anti-CD3F(ab')2-RTA (30 micrograms/d intraperitoneally) beginning 7 days after GVHD induction was beneficial in treating established GVHD in these mice, as evidenced by significantly prolonged survival (MST, greater than 80 days), superior mean weight values, and improved clinical appearance. Neither intact anti-CD3, unconjugated anti-CD3 F(ab')2 fragments, nor a mixture of anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 MoAbs (which are highly effective in prophylactic models) were as effective. F(ab')2 fragments made from anti-Lyt-1 (the murine homologue of human anti-CD5) linked to RTA were also not effective, despite the fact that both anti-CD3F(ab')2-RTA and anti-Lyt- 1F(ab')2-RTA had similar half-lives of about 9 hours. The IT also increased MST in two aggressive models of GVHD across non-H-2 minor histocompatibility barriers, indicating that the usefulness of anti- CD3F(ab')2-dgRTA is not limited to a single-strain combination. This agent should be further investigated as an alternative to current strategies for treating steroid refractory GVHD.
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Anti-B4-blocked ricin (anti-B4-bR) is an immunotoxin directed against CD19-positive cells that is currently being tested in several B-cell leukemia/lymphoma clinical trials. To explore the possibility of using anti-B4-bR in combination with chemotherapy protocols, we investigated the in vitro and in vivo cytotoxic effects of combining it with doxorubicin or etoposide using the lymphoma cell line Namalwa and a P- glycoprotein-expressing cell line, Namalwa/mdr-1, obtained by retroviral infection of Namalwa cells with the mdr-1 gene. Namalwa/mdr- 1 cells were slightly more sensitive to anti-B4-bR than Namalwa cells; IC37 values were approximately 4 pmol/L and 8 pmol/L, respectively. When anti-B4-bR was combined simultaneously with doxorubicin or etoposide, additive to supra-additive killing of Namalwa and Namalwa/mdr-1 cells was observed. In xenografts of Na-malwa/mdr-1 cells in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice, doxorubicin and etoposide at their maximum tolerated doses (3 mg/kg x 3 or 15 mg/kg x 3) showed no therapeutic effect. However, treatment with 5 daily bolus injections of anti-B4-bR (50 micrograms/kg) followed by treatment with doxorubicin or etoposide significantly increased the life span of the mice by 129% and 115%, respectively. After treatment with anti-B4-bR, the Namalwa/mdr-1 population expressed lower levels of P-glycoprotein, and this decrease may account for the synergistic action of the drug combinations. These results suggest that anti-B4-bR could be used to good effect in combination with current treatment regimens and further hint at a promising role for this immunotoxin in treatment of disease at the minimal residual disease stage, where cells may be resistant to chemotherapy.
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The plasma clotting factors used to treat hemophiliacs who have developed inhibitory antibodies have a shared history of limited clinical safety and utility. To improve on existing bypass factors, we have developed a reversibly acylated form of human plasma factor Xa capable of providing a time-dependent release of procoagulant activity. Factor Xa was treated with p-amidinophenyl p′-anisate to generate anisoyl Xa. The chemical modification of the protein involves acylation of the active site serine residue of factor Xa. Anisoyl Xa deacylated in a time, pH, and temperature-dependent manner. Active factor Xa generated on deacylation of anisoyl Xa exhibited amidolytic and prothrombinase complex activities in in vitro assays, the level being comparable to those of untreated factor Xa. When Anisoyl Xa was infused into rabbits, active factor Xa was generated on deacylation of the acylated enzyme, which shortened the activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) in a dose-dependent manner. The duration of effect on rabbit APTT could be directly correlated to the level of human plasma factor Xa. Because anisoyl Xa bypasses the “tenase” complex that is compromised in hemophilia A and B and is unaffected by inhibitory antibodies, it has the potential to be used as an effective bypass therapy.
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Cellular cation homeostasis in mouse erythrocytes with defective membrane skeletons was examined in three mouse mutants, hemolytic anemia (sphha/sphha), spherocytosis (sph/sph), and normoblastosis (nb/nb), and compared with reticulocytes produced by repetitive bleeding of congenic normal mice. To assess reticulocyte maturity, nucleic acid and transferrin receptor contents were measured by fluorescence flow cytometry; mutant cells were somewhat more mature than normal reticulocytes by these criteria. Red blood cell (RBC) sodium contents (Nac+) in homozygous sphha/sphha, sph/sph, and nb/nb animals were 30.1 +/- 0.9, 28.9 +/- 0.3, and 26.9 +/- 1.5 mmol/L cell, respectively, whereas cellular potassium (Kc+) was 102 +/- 2.6, 101 +/- 7.8, and 97.4 +/- 3.0. Nac+ and Kc+ in normal reticulocyte preparations were 11.3 +/- 0.7 and 123 +/- 10, respectively. Net Na+ and K+ fluxes in the presence of ouabain were markedly increased in mutant RBCs. Sodium uptake was 14.8 +/- 1.6, 15.4 +/- 3.3, and 14.7 +/- 3.1 mmol/L cell/h in sphha/sphha, sph/sph, and nb/nb mutants, respectively, whereas K+ loss was 17.0 +/- 4.0, 15.0 +/- 3.8, and 14.1 +/- 2.6. Normal mouse reticulocytes gained Na+ at a rate of 3.9 +/- 1.0 mmol/L cell/h and lost K+ at 6.0 +/- 2.1, rates indistinguishable from those in mature mouse RBCs. Potassium loss from sphha/sphha and nb/nb cells was not dependent on the presence of a Na+ gradient, and net cation movements were insensitive to bumetanide (sphha/sphha and nb/nb RBCs) and to chloride replacement with sulfamate (nb/nb cells). We conclude that mutant mouse RBCs with dysfunctional membrane skeletons have increased passive permeability to monovalent cations. These findings support a role of the membrane skeleton in the maintenance of the membrane permeability barrier and suggest that the abnormal permeability associated with human hereditary spherocytosis and elliptocytosis may be a consequence of the membrane skeleton defects reported in these disorders.
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Monocyte expression and secretion of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and TNF receptors (TNF-R) p55 and p75 was studied in patients receiving granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) after intensive chemotherapy. TNF expression and secretion of biologically active TNF was increased at regeneration compared with that of patients who had received chemotherapy alone. This effect persisted for several weeks after cessation of growth factor therapy. GM-CSF restored the responsiveness of monocytes to bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which appeared to be diminished after chemotherapy alone. Expression and secretion of TNF-R p55 and p75 by monocytes was augmented by GM-CSF therapy in association with the increase in TNF protein. We propose that GM-CSF administration after chemotherapy restores the normal responsiveness of monocytes to a secondary stimulus such as LPS and primes monocytes to respond to LPS with increased expression and secretion of TNF and TNF-R.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: In this report, a novel approach is described to physically separate erythroid progenitors from monocyte and granulocyte progenitors, based on the expression of CD34 and Kit. Using biotin-labeled human Kit ligand (KL) and flow cytometry, Kit was detectable on 2% to 3% of the nucleated cells in rhesus monkey bone marrow. Combination of biotin-KL with CD34 monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) showed that Kit was expressed on subsets of CD34low and CD34pos cells. Our data clearly demonstrate that CD34pos cells are more heterogeneous with respect to Kit expression than observed in studies using Kit MoAb. A small cluster, approximately 7% of the CD34pos cells, expressed CD34 at submaximal levels and stained brightly with biotinylated KL. This CD34pos/kithi fraction contained predominantly erythroid progenitors (burst-forming units- erythroid; BFU-E). The majority of the granulocytic and monocytic progenitors (colony-forming units-granulocyte/macrophage; CFU-GM) were CD34pos/kitmed. Some BFU-E were also detected in the CD34pos/kitmed and CD34low/kitpos fractions at low frequency. In the latter subset, most erythroid colony-forming units (CFU-E) were recovered. Using three- color flow cytometry, we analyzed expression of Kit in relation to that of CD34 and the class II major histocompatibility antigen, RhLA-DR. The most immature bone marrow cells that can be identified in vitro, ie, CD34pos/RhLA-DRlow cells, were kitmed. The CD34pos/kithi and CD34pos/kitneg subsets predominantly contained the more mature RhLA- DRbright cells. Our results demonstrate that erythroid precursors express c-kit at much higher levels than monomyeloid precursors and pluripotent progenitors. The difference in expression levels of CD34 and c-kit can be exploited to isolate BFU-E populations that are virtually devoid of nonerythroid cells.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Using an in vitro expansion and differentiation system for human CD34+ cord blood (CB) progenitor cells, we analyzed the induction and expression kinetics of the granulomonocyte associated lysosomal proteins myeloperoxidase (MPO), lysozyme (LZ), lactoferrin (LF), and macrosialin (CD68). Freshly isolated CD34+ CB cells were negative for LZ and LF, and only small proportions expressed MPO (4% +/- 2%) or CD68 (3% +/- 1%). Culturing of CD34+ cells for 14 days with interleukin (IL)- 1, IL-3, IL-6, stem cell factor, granulocyte-macrophage colony- stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and G-CSF resulted in on average a 1,750- fold amplification of cell number, of which 83% +/- 7% were MPO+. Without addition of GM-CSF and G-CSF, lower increases in total cell numbers (mean, 211-fold) and lower proportions of MPO+ cells (54% +/- 11%) were observed. The proportion of MPO+ cells slightly exceeded but clearly correlated with the proportion of cells positive for the granulomonocyte associated surface molecules CD11b (Mac-1), CD15 (LeX), CD64 (Fc gamma RI) CD66, or CD89 (Fc alpha R). At day 14 MPO+ and LZ+ cells were virtually identical. However, at earlier time points during culture (days 4 and 7), single MPO+ or LZ+ cell populations were also observed, which only later acquired LZ and MPO, respectively. Maturation of cells into the neutrophilic pathway was indicated by the acquisition of MPO, followed by LZ. In contrast, maturation of cells into the monocytic pathway was indicated by the acquisition of LZ followed by MPO and CD14. CD68 was found to be expressed at day 4 by the majority of cells and was not restricted to the granulomonocytic cells, as cells with megakariocytic (CD41+) or erythroid (CD71hi) features were CD68+. LF expression was observed only in GM- plus G-CSF- supplemented cultures, in which only 26% +/- 5% of cells expressed LF by day 14.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Infection of hematopoietic progenitor cells with the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) has been proposed as an explanation for the cytopenias associated with HCMV-related disease. To test this hypothesis, CD34+ cells, which include the hematopoietic progenitors, as well as mature leukocyte populations were purified on a fluorescence- activated cell sorter and analyzed for HCMV DNA by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A total of 33 samples from 31 immunosuppressed as well as immunocompetent HCMV-seropositive individuals were studied. CD34+ cells were PCR-positive in four of seven bone marrow aspirates from allogeneic bone marrow transplant recipients, in three of eight aspirates from patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, and in the first of two bone marrow samples from an immunocompetent patient with primary HCMV disease. CD34+ cells purified from peripheral blood for autologous and allogeneic transplantation were also analyzed, and 4 of 13 samples were HCMV DNA-positive. Interestingly, two of the four HCMV-positive samples were from healthy allogeneic donors. Among the mature leukocyte populations, the monocytes were most frequently found to be HCMV DNA-positive. No HCMV DNA was detected in the total bone marrow leukocytes of 13 healthy seropositive bone marrow donors or in the CD34+ cell fraction of three further seropositive donors. In conclusion, the data provide strong evidence that CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells can be infected with HCMV in immunosuppressed patients, while this cell population was not identified as a major viral reservoir in healthy HCMV-seropositive individuals.
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Numerous studies have suggested that iron (Fe) chelators such as desferrioxamine (DFO) may be useful antitumor agents (Blatt and Stitely, Cancer Res 47:1749, 1987; Becton and Bryles, Cancer Res 48:7189, 1988). Recent work with several analogues of the lipophilic Fe chelator, pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone (PIH), indicate that some of these ligands are considerably more efficient than DFO both in terms of their Fe chelation efficacy and at preventing 3H-thymidine incorporation by neuroblastoma (NB) cells (Richardson and Ponka, J Lab Clin Med 124:660, 1994). Considering this fact, the present study was designed to test the antiproliferative effect of a wide range of PIH analogues to identify the most active compounds. A total of 36 ligands have been examined that were synthesized by condensation of three types of aromatic aldehydes (pyridoxal, salicylaldehyde, and 2-hydroxy-1- naphthyladehyde) with a range of acid hydrazides. The effects of these chelators were assessed using the human NB cell line, SK-N-MC. Although PIH was far more effective than DFO at preventing Fe uptake from transferrin, it was less effective than DFO at preventing cellular proliferation (DFO ID50 = 22 mumol/L; PIH ID50 = 75 mumol/L). In contrast, 14 PIH analogues were far more efficient than DFO at preventing proliferation (ID50 = 1 to 7 mumol/L) and may have potential as antitumor agents. The most effective compounds were those hydrazones derived from 2-hydroxy-1-naphthylaldehyde. Most of the PIH analogues were considerably more effective than DFO at both preventing 59Fe uptake from 59Fe-transferrin and in mobilizing 59Fe from prelabeled NB cells. In addition, a linear relationship between Fe chelation efficacy and antiproliferative activity was found only for hydrazones derived from salicylaldehyde. Apart from gallium (Ga) nitrate having an antiproliferative effect by itself, this metal potentiated the antiproliferative effect of PIH but not that of DFO. Spectrophotometric studies showed that PIH could chelate Ga, and it can be suggested that, like the PIH-Fe complex that donates Fe to reticulocytes (Ponka et al, Biochim Biophys Acta 718:151, 1982), the PIH-Ga complex may efficiently bestow Ga to NB cells. The results suggest that analogues of PIH deserve further vigorous investigation because they may be useful therapeutic agents for the treatment of cancer.
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Interleukin-13 (IL-13) induced a potent mitogenic response in IL-3- dependent TF-1 cells and DNA synthesis to a lesser extent in MO7E and FDC-P1 cells. IL-13 stimulation of these lines, like IL-4 and insulin- like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), resulted in tyrosine phosphorylation of a 170-kD substrate. The tyrosine-phosphorylated 170-kD substrate strongly associated with the 85-kD subunit of phosphoinositol-3 (PI-3) kinase and with Grb-2. Anti-4PS serum readily detected the 170-kD substrate in lysates from both TF-1 and FDC-P1 cells stimulated with IL-13 or IL-4. These data provide evidence that IL-13 induces tyrosine phosphorylation of the 4PS substrate, providing an essential interface between the IL- 13 receptor and signaling molecules containing SH2 domains. IL-13 and IL-4 stimulation of murine L cell fibroblasts, which endogenously express the IL-4 receptor (IL-4R alpha) and lack expression of the IL-2 receptor gamma subunit (IL-2R gamma), resulted in tyrosine phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1)/4PS. Enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation of IRS-1/4PS was observed in response to IL-4, but not IL-13 treatment of L cells transfected with the IL-2R gamma chain. These results indicate that IL-13 does not use the IL-2R gamma subunit in its receptor complex and that expression of IL-2R gamma enhances, but is not absolutely required for mediating IL-4-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of IRS-1/4PS.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX complex mediates platelet aggregation in response to high shear forces by binding von Willebrand factor (vWF) in the plasma. We investigated the possibility that the complex could mediate a similar phenomenon if expressed in nonhematopoietic cells. When agitated on a tabletop shaker, CHO and L cells expressing the full complex formed large aggregates in the presence of vWF and the modulator ristocetin. When the rate of agitation was increased, aggregation occurred without added ristocetin and appeared to require only the application of a physical force. The aggregation was homophilic and temperature-dependent and required a functional ligand- binding subunit of the GP Ib-IX complex, GP Ib alpha. Posttranslational tyrosine sulfation of GP Ib alpha was required for aggregate formation and stability. Thus, aggregation of cells expressing the GP Ib-IX complex is a unique example of a ligand-receptor interaction induced by mechanical forces and demonstrates an important biological role for sulfation of tyrosine residues.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The use of solvent/detergent mixtures and various forms of heat treatment to inactivate viruses has become widespread in the preparation of blood derivatives. Because viruses that lack lipid envelopes and/or are heat resistant, eg, hepatitis A virus (HAV) or parvovirus B19 may be present, the use of two methods of virus elimination that operate by different mechanisms has been advocated. We now report on short wavelength ultraviolet light (UVC) irradiation for virus inactivation and enhancement of its compatibility with proteins by quenchers of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Treatment of an antihemophilic factor (AHF) concentrate or whole plasma with 0.1 J/cm2 inactivated 10(5) to 〉 or = 10(6) infectious doses (ID) of encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV), HAV, bacteriophage M13, vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), and porcine parvovirus. However, the recovery of factor VIII was 30% or lower on treatment of an AHF concentrate and 60% on treatment of plasma. Factor VIII recovery could be increased with little or no effect on virus kill by addition of rutin, a flavonoid known to quench both type I and type II ROS. On treatment of plasma in the presence of rutin, the recovery of several other coagulation factors was also enhanced by rutin addition and typically exceeded 75%. Electrophoretic analysis of treated AHF concentrate confirmed the advantage of rutin presence; UVC irradiation of plasma did not cause discernible changes in electrophoretic banding patterns, even in the absence of rutin. We conclude that addition of UVC treatment to existing processes used in the manufacture of blood derivatives will provide an added margin of safety, especially for nonenveloped or heat-stable viruses.
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The leukocyte sialyloglycoprotein CD43 exhibits features of a signal transducing molecule and is thought to be important for T-cell activation and adhesion. However, cellular biochemical events in which CD43 participates remain poorly understood. Here we provide evidence that CD43 regulates tyrosine phosphorylation of a specific substrate in T cells. A 93-kD tyrosine phosphoprotein was identified specifically in the CD43+ T-cell line CEM, but not in their CD43-deficient counterparts derived by gene targeting. The 93-kD phosphoprotein was detected in the CD43-deficient CEM cells after transfection with CD43 cDNA, and it could be specifically phosphorylated in lysates from the CD43-deficient cells by incubation with a CD43 immunoprecipitate obtained from the CD43+ cells. Expression of CD43 in HeLa cell transfectants was associated with the appearance of novel phosphoproteins including one with a molecular weight of approximately 93 kD, confirming that tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular substrates results specifically from CD43 expression. We conclude that CD43 regulates tyrosine phosphorylation of a 93-kD T-cell substrate.
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Platelet adhesion to fibrin at high shear rates depends on both the glycoprotein (GP) IIb:IIIa complex and a secondary interaction between GPIb and von Willebrand factor (vWF). This alternative link between platelets and vWF in promoting platelet adhesion to fibrin has been examined in flowing whole blood with a rectangular perfusion chamber. Optimal adhesion required both platelets and vWF, as shown by the following observations. No binding of vWF could be detected when plasma was perfused over a fibrin surface or when coated fibrinogen was incubated with control plasma in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. However, when platelets were present during perfusion, interactions between vWF and fibrin could be visualized with immunoelectron microscopy. Exposure of fibrin surfaces to normal plasma before perfusion with severe von Willebrand's disease blood did not compensate for the presence of plasma vWF necessary for adhesion. vWF mutants in which the GPIIb:IIIa binding site was mutated or the GPIb binding site was deleted showed that vWF only interacts with GPIb on platelets in supporting adhesion to fibrin and not with GPIIb:IIIa. Complementary results were obtained with specific monoclonal antibodies against vWF. Thus, vWF must first bind to platelets before it can interact with fibrin and promote platelet adhesion. Furthermore, only GPIb, but not GPIIb:IIIa is directly involved in this interaction of vWF with platelets.
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) caused by T-cell recognition of minor histocompatibility (MiHC) antigens is a major complication of bone marrow transplantation. GVHD therapy has focused on removal or suppression of donor T cells, but modulation of MiHC antigen presentation to CD4+ T cells may represent an alternative approach. Chloroquine is known to inhibit major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II presentation of antigen in vitro by affecting invariant chain dissociation from MHC class II. The goal of this study was to evaluate the role of chloroquine in abrogating T-cell priming to MiHC and GVHD in mice after transplantation of an MiHC incompatible donor. C57BL/6 mice were treated with phosphate-buffered saline or chloroquine at 400 micrograms intraperitoneally every day for 5 days before priming with BALB.B cells (MiHC-incompatible) followed by weekly injections of chloroquine at 400 micrograms for 4 to 8 weeks. Chloroquine treatment decreased the proliferative T-cell response to MiHC by 67% and the cytolytic T-cell activation by greater than 50%. After bone marrow transplantation (LP/J into C57BL/6; MiHC-incompatible), GVHD was significantly decreased in chloroquine-treated mice (17% with GVHD) as compared with that in controls (92% with GVHD). Chloroquine treatment did not have other effects in vivo on the normal T- and B-cell mitogenic responses, T-cell allogeneic responses, and MHC class II and I surface expression. Chloroquine treatment does decrease the ability of C57BL/6 antigen-presenting cells to stimulate C3H.SW T cells reactive with MiHC expressed on C57BL/6 cells, suggesting an effect on MHC class II presentation of MiHC in vivo. Treatment with chloroquine in vivo appears to result in decreased CD4+ T-cell priming to MiHC and GVHD by decreased class II MHC antigen presentation. Thus, chloroquine treatment may represent an alternative approach to control GVHD.
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: To elucidate the role of the branched structure of sugar chains of human erythropoietin (EPO) in the expression of in vivo activity, the pharmacokinetic profile of a less active recombinant human EPO sample (EPO-bi) enriched with biantennary sugar chains was compared with that of a highly active control EPO sample enriched with tetraantennary sugar chains. After an intravenous injection in rats, 125I-EPO-bi disappeared from the plasma with 3.2 times greater total body clearance (Cltot) than control 125I-EPO. Whole-body autoradiography after 20 minutes of administration indicated that the overall distribution of radioactivity is similar, but 125I-EPO-bi showed a higher level of radioactivity in the kidneys than control 125I-EPO. Quantitative determination of radioactivity in the tissues also indicated that radioactivity of 125I-EPO-bi in the kidneys was two times higher than that of control 125I-EPO. The difference in plasma disappearance between 125I-EPO-bi and control 125I-EPO was not observed in bilaterally nephrectomized rats. The distribution of 125I-EPO-bi to bone marrow and spleen was similarly inhibited by simultaneous injection of excess amounts of either the nonlabeled EPO-bi or control EPO. These results indicate that the low in vivo biologic activity of EPO-bi results from rapid clearance from the systemic circulation by renal handling. Thus, the well-branched structure of the N-linked sugar chain of EPO is suggested to play an important role in maintaining its higher plasma level, which guarantees an effective transfer to target organs and stimulation of erythroid progenitor cells.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) is a malignancy of mature lymphocytes caused by the retrovirus human T-cell lymphotropic virus-I. It is an aggressive leukemia with a median survival time of 9 months; no chemotherapy regimen appears successful in inducing long-term disease- free survival. The scientific basis of the present study is that ATL cells express high-affinity interleukin-2 receptors identified by the anti-Tac monoclonal antibody, whereas normal resting cells do not. To exploit this difference, we administered anti-Tac armed with Yttrium-90 (90Y) to 18 patients with ATL initially (first 9 patients) in a phase I dose-escalation trial and subsequently (second group of 9 patients) in a phase II trial involving a uniform 10-mCi dose of 90Y-labeled anti- Tac. Patients undergoing a remission were permitted to receive up to eight additional doses. At the 5- to 15-mCi doses used, 9 of 16 evaluable patients responded to 90Y anti-Tac with a partial (7 patients) or complete (2 patients) remission. The responses observed represent improved efficacy in terms of length of remission when compared with previous results with unmodified anti-Tac. Clinically meaningful (〉 or = grade 3) toxicity was largely limited to the hematopoietic system. In conclusion, radioimmunotherapy with 90Y anti- Tac directed toward the IL-2R expressed on ATL cells may provide a useful approach for treatment of this aggressive malignancy.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: T-helper cells can differentiate into at least two subtypes secreting distinct profiles of cytokines, Th1 and Th2, regulating immunoprotection and different immunopathologies. Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is both the product and the inducer of Th2 cells, raising the question whether IL-4 can be produced in response to antigen-independent stimuli. Here we show that human basophils produce IL-4 on stimulation with IL-3 and C5a or C5adesarg in similar amounts as induced by IgE- receptor-cross-linking. C5a-induced IL-4 production requires the presence of IL-3, with little effect of the sequence of stimuli addition. No “Th1-cytokines” (interferon-gamma and IL-2) and even no “Th2-cytokines” (IL-3, IL-5, IL-10, and granulocyte-macrophage colony- stimulating factor) are produced by basophils in response to either IgE- dependent or IgE-independent activation. The generation of leukotriene C4 (LTC4) is regulated in a similar manner. However, C5a induces a rapid, transient burst of leukotriene formation only if added after IL- 3. Interestingly, upon prolonged culture, a late phase of continuous LTC4 production is observed, which also requires two signals (IL-3 and C5a), but rather depends on their continuous presence than on their sequence of action. These data describe an antigen-independent pathway of very restricted IL-4 expression. Thus, basophils must be considered as central immunoregulatory cells of the innate immune system. Furthermore, the results show that LTC4 can also be generated more continuously for many hours, a phenomenon that may be of particular importance in chornic allergic inflammation, such as asthma.
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Peripheral blood T cells were immortalized in vitro by introduction of the Tax1 gene of human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) with a retroviral vector and were characterized for transformation-associated markers. Long-term observation showed that these Tax1-immortalized T cells eventually exhibited very similar features that were characteristic of HTLV-1-immortalized T cells, ie, increased expression of egr-1, c-fos, IL-2R alpha, and Lyn and decreased expression of Lck and cell-surface CD3 antigen. Among these changes, an increase in the expression of Lyn and a decrease in the expression of Lck and cell- surface CD3 antigen were observed only in Tax1-immortalized T cells after long-term culture. The expression level of Tax1 protein did not differ significantly between early and late passage of cells, and the cellular clonality was found to be the same by the analysis of the retroviral vector integration site and the T-cell receptor beta-chain gene rearrangement pattern. These changes in the expression of Lyn, Lck, and cell-surface CD3 antigen probably resulted from indirect effects of Tax1 that appeared after extended culture.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: A novel hematopoietic growth factor for primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells, the ligand for the flt3/flk2 receptor, (FL), has been recently purified and its gene has been cloned. In the present study, we investigated the effects of FL on the proliferation and differentiation of normal and leukemic myeloid progenitor cells. We demonstrate that FL is a potent stimulator of the in vitro growth of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), interleukin- 3 (IL-3), or G-CSF-dependent granulocyte-macrophage committed precursors from Lin- CD34+ bone marrow cells of normal donors. By contrast, FL does not affect the growth of erythroid-committed progenitors even in the presence of erythropoietin. The effect of FL on the proliferation and on the in vitro growth of clonogenic leukemic precursor cells was studied in 54 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cases. Fresh leukemia blasts from 36 of 45 patients with AML significantly responded to FL without any relation to the French-American-British (FAB) subtype. FL stimulated the proliferation of leukemic blasts in a dose-dependent fashion. Synergistic activities were seen when FL was combined with G-CSF, GM-CSF, IL-3, or stem cell factor (SCF). FL as a single factor induced or increased significantly colony formation by clonogenic precursor cells from 21 of 24 patients with AML. In the presence of suboptimal and optimal concentrations of G-CSF, GM-CSF, IL3, SCF, or a combination of all factors, FL strongly enhanced the number of leukemic colonies (up to 18-fold). We also evaluated the induction of tyrosine phosphorylated protein on FL stimulation in fresh AML cells. We demonstrate that, on FL stimulation, a band of phosphorylated protein(s) of about 90 kD can be detected in FL- responsive, but not in FL-unresponsive cases. This study suggests that FL may be an important factor for the growth of myeloid leukemia cells, either as a direct stimulus or as a synergistic factor with other cytokines.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Thrombopoietin (TPO) is a recently identified growth factor that regulates megakaryocytopoiesis. Its receptor, c-Mpl, is expressed in megakaryocyte progenitors, mature megakaryocytes, and human blood platelets. We have observed that TPO treatment of human platelets resulted in tyrosine phosphorylation of several cellular proteins, including the c-Mpl receptor and the 85-kD subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K). TPO stimulated this tyrosine phosphorylation in a time-dependent manner, reaching a maximum in 5 minutes. The tyrosine phosphorylation of PI 3-K was dependent on the concentration of TPO and reached a maximum at concentrations between 50 and 100 ng/mL. This phosphorylation was independent of extracellular fibrinogen and ligation of the alpha IIb beta 3 integrin. In contrast, TPO, in the presence of exogenous fibrinogen, induced concentration- dependent platelet aggregation, which was blocked by the soluble c-Mpl receptor. Increasing TPO concentrations modulated the degree of the primary wave of aggregation and the lag phase, but not the slope or maximum of the secondary wave of aggregation. This secondary aggregation was controlled by the addition of apyrase, suggesting an adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-dependent mechanism. Treatment of platelets with TPO resulted in augmented binding of 125I-fibrinogen to intact platelets, with a 50% effect (EC50) occurring between 5 and 10 ng/mL. TPO-induced binding of fibrinogen to platelets was comparable in degree with that observed by stimulation with 10 mumol/L ADP. In an immobilized collagen-platelet adhesion assay, a significant increase in the attachment of TPO-stimulated platelets was observed. This effect was dependent on the concentration of TPO. At 50 ng/mL of TPO, platelet attachment to collagen increased threefold compared with the buffer control. Furthermore, the presence of fibrinogen did not significantly alter TPO augmentation of the platelet-collagen interaction. This interaction was mediated by the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) adhesion recognition sequence, as it was completely abolished by 100 mumol/L of the RGDS peptide. A fraction of the TPO-dependent platelet attachment to a collagen-coated surface was insensitive to treatment with prostaglandin E1. Furthermore, antibody to alpha IIb integrin partially inhibited platelet attachment to collagen, suggesting that the integrin alpha IIb beta 3 participates in this association. These data indicate that TPO might function not only as a cytokine in megakaryocyte growth and differentiation, but may also participate in direct platelet activation and modulate platelet-extracellular matrix interactions.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Megakaryocyte growth and development factor (MGDF) has recently been identified as a ligand for the c-mpl receptor. Using retroviral- mediated gene transfer, MGDF has been overexpressed in mice to evaluate the systematic effects due to chronic exposure to this growth factor. MGDF overexpressing mice had more rapid platelet recovery than control mice after transplantation. Following this recovery, the platelet levels continued increasing to fourfold to eightfold above normal baseline levels and remained elevated (five-fold above control mice) in these animals, which are alive and well at more than 4 months posttransplantation. Increased megakaryocyte numbers were detected in a number of organs in these mice including bone marrow, spleen, liver, and lymph nodes. Prolonged overexpression of MGDF led to decreased marrow hematopoiesis, especially erythropoiesis, with a shift to extramedullary hematopoiesis in the spleen and liver. All the MGDF overexpressing mice analyzed to date developed myelofibrosis and osteosclerosis, possibly induced by megakaryocyte and platelet produced cytokines. No significant effect on other hematopoietic lineages was seen in the MGDF overexpressing mice, showing that the stimulatory effect of MGDF in vivo is restricted to the megakaryocyte lineage.
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Glucocorticoid (GC)-induced apoptosis is a well-recognized physiologic regulator of murine T-cell number and function. We have analyzed its mechanisms in human mature T cells, which have been thought to be insensitive until recently. Peripheral blood T cells showed sensitivity to GC-induced apoptosis soon after the proliferative response to a mitogenic stimulation, and were also sensitive to spontaneous (ie, growth factor deprivation-dependent) apoptosis. CD8+ T cells were more sensitive to both forms than CD4+ T cells. Acquisition of sensitivity to GC-induced apoptosis was not associated with any change in number or affinity of GC receptors. Both spontaneous and GC-induced apoptosis were increased by the macromolecular synthesis inhibitors, cycloheximide (CHX) and puromycin. A positive correlation between the degree of protein synthesis inhibition and the extent of apoptosis was observed. Interleukin-2 (IL-2) IL-4, and IL-10 protected (IL-2 〉 IL-10 〉 IL-4) T cells from both forms of apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner. Our data suggest that spontaneous and GC-induced apoptosis regulate the human mature T-cell repertoire by acting early after the immune response and differentially affecting T-cell subsets.
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Binding of plasma Factor VII/VIIa to the tissue factor (TF) receptor initiates the coagulation protease cascades. TF expression by circulating monocytes is associated with thrombotic and inflammatory complications in a variety of diseases. Transcriptional activation of the human TF gene in monocytic cells exposed to bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is mediated by binding of c-Rel/p65 heterodimers to a kappa B site in the TF promoter. Here, we report that a family of anti-inflammatory agents, known as the salicylates, inhibited LPS induction of TF activity and TF gene transcription in human monocytes and monocytic THP-1 cells at clinically relevant doses. Furthermore, sodium salicylate blocked the LPS-induced proteolytic degradation of I kappa B alpha, which prevented the nuclear translocation of c-Rel/p65 heterodimers. In contrast, two other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, ibuprofen and indomethacin, did not inhibit LPS induction of the TF gene. These results indicated that salicylates inhibited LPS induction of TF gene transcription in monocytic cells by preventing nuclear translocation of c-Rel/p65 heterodimers. The clinical benefits of salicylates in the treatment of several diseases, including atherosclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis, may be related to their ability to reduce monocyte gene expression.
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: In this report, we show that ionizing radiation (IR) at a clinically relevant dose (4 Gy) causes apoptosis in macrovascular and microvascular human endothelial cells. Treatment of irradiated cells with a low dose of bacterial endotoxin (LPS), similar to the levels observed in serum during endotoxemia, enhanced the rate of apoptosis, although LPS alone was unable to induce programmed cell death. The cytokine and endotoxin antagonist interleukin-10 (IL-10) reduced the rate of LPS + IR-induced apoptosis to levels obtained with irradiation alone. Using neutralizing antibodies against tumor necrosis factor- alpha (TNF), we could show crucial involvement of TNF in the LPS- mediated enhancement of IR-induced apoptosis, but not in the IR-induced apoptosis per se. However, further analysis strongly suggested the transmembrane form of TNF (mTNF), but not soluble TNF, to be accountable for the LPS-mediated cytotoxic effects. Studies with anatagonistic receptor specific antibodies clearly showed that TNF receptor type I (TR60) is essential and sufficient to elicit this effect. These findings are of potential clinical importance because they may disclose a relevant mechanism that leads to endothelial damage after radiotherapy or total body irradiation used for conditioning in bone marrow transplantation and that may thus contribute to transplant related complications, especially in association with endotoxemia or related inflammatory states.
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Modest progress has been achieved over the past two decades in the treatment of adult acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). With modern therapy, response rates are 70% to 80%, but cure rates only average 25% to 30%. Improved in vivo models are needed to investigate the biology of adult ALL and to test new treatment concepts. Fresh leukemia samples from children with ALL have been successfully transplanted into mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), but no experience exists for adult ALL. We treated SCID mice with 2 mg cyclophosphamide 24 hours before intravenously injecting 20 x 10(6) viable leukemia cells obtained from 13 patients with newly diagnosed adult ALL within five defined phenotype/karyotype subcategories. Ten (76%) of 13 injected leukemia specimens representing all five categories engrafted. The median survival duration of mice was 20 weeks from the time of leukemia cell injection. The rate of engraftment by ALL subset was as follows: two of two T-cell, two of three t(11q23), two of two hyperdiploid, two of three t(9;22), and two of three diploid ALL. The pattern of organ involvement by leukemia in the mice was similar to that of the human disease. Immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry documented the stability of each leukemic phenotype after passage through SCID mice. Cells transplanted from the spleen and bone marrow of mice engrafted with ALL into recipient mice resulted in consistent engraftment. The survival duration in passage groups was similar to that in groups injected with primary cells. The high frequency of engraftment, availability of frozen original specimens, and successful passages in SCID mice provide an in vivo model of adult ALL suitable for further studies of the disease biology and for design of drug studies for the different subtypes of previously untreated adult ALL.
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Retrovirus-mediated gene transfer was used to study the effects of dysregulated expression of the zinc-finger transcription factor, GATA- 1, which has been shown to be required for erythropoiesis. A retroviral vector (PGK-GATA-1) was constructed with the murine GATA-1 gene linked to the human phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) promoter. Expression of GATA- 1 was demonstrated by super-shift analysis with a monoclonal antibody against murine GATA-1 using extracts of nonerythroid cytotoxic T- lymphocyte line (CTLL) cells transduced with the PGK-GATA-1 virus. Mouse bone marrow cells were transduced in vitro and transplanted into recipient animals. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis performed on DNA extracted from peripheral blood 12 to 40 weeks posttransplantation demonstrated the presence of the PGK-GATA-1 provirus. Proviral integrity and copy number were demonstrated by Southern blot analysis of DNA from spleen, thymus, and bone marrow tissues from the long-term animals. At 16 weeks posttransplant, animals that received cells transduced by the GATA-1 virus maintained a lower white blood cell (WBC) count and absolute neutrophil count (ANC) and a higher red blood cell (RBC) count than control animals that received cells transduced with a virus containing a neor gene. Erythropoiesis was stimulated in GATA-1 and control animals by phlebotomy. GATA-1 animals required more extensive phlebotomy to reach a hematocrit less than 25 and their hematocrit returned to normal levels sooner than control animals. The effect of twice-daily injections of 10 U recombinant erythropoietin (epo) was also examined. The hematocrit of GATA-1 animals showed a more rapid and elevated response to epo than the hematocrit of control animals. These data suggest that dysregulated expression of GATA-1 in primitive hematopoietic cells enlarges the pool of epo-responsive erythroid progenitor cells.
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: To determine if circulating Sezary cells can be classified as reactive or neoplastic based on the ability to detect the presence or absence of clonal T-cell receptor beta chain (TCR-beta) gene rearrangements by Southern blot analysis, we evaluated the peripheral blood of 25 patients: 11 patients with Sezary syndrome (SS), 11 with benign inflammatory dermatoses (BID), and three normal controls. Three of 11 patients with SS, with Sezary counts ranging from 14% to 52%, did not demonstrate any clonal TCR-beta gene rearrangements in the peripheral blood, despite a TCR-beta rearrangement by Southern blot analysis in the skin. Ten of 11 BID patients and all normal controls showed no evidence of a TCR-beta gene rearrangement in the peripheral blood. However, one patient with psoriasis demonstrated a TCR-beta gene rearrangement in the peripheral blood. The TCR-beta gene rearrangement detected in this patient, confirmed with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of the TCR-gamma gene rearrangement, did not correlate with the presence of circulating Sezary cells or the increased risk of neoplasia. Our results indicate that circulating Sezary cells may be monoclonal (neoplastic) or polyclonal (reactive), as defined by TCR gene rearrangement studies. Circulating Sezary cells in SS may be reactive in nature and not accurately reflect the actual tumor burden in the peripheral blood. The presence of circulating Sezary cells or the presence of a clone of cells defined by TCR-beta gene rearrangement in the peripheral blood is not limited to neoplastic disease processes.
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Donor lymphocyte infusions can reinduce complete remission in the majority of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) who relapse into chronic phase after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Such infusions are associated with a high incidence of graft- versus-host disease (GVHD) and marrow aplasia. BMT using selective depletion of CD8+ lymphocytes from donor cells reduces the incidence of GVHD without an increase in leukemia relapse. We hypothesized that infusion of CD8-depleted donor peripheral blood lymphocytes could also reinduce complete remissions with a lesser potential to produce symptomatic GVHD in patients with CML who relapsed after allogeneic BMT. Ten patients with Ph(+) CML who relapsed a median of 353 days after BMT (range, 82 to 1,096 days) received donor lymphocyte infusions depleted of CD8+ cells. Nine patients received a single infusion and 1 received two infusions. Four patients were treated while in chronic phase with clonal evolution, 2 during accelerated phase, 3 during blast crisis, and 1 in a cytogenetic relapse. A mean of 0.9 +/- 0.3 x 10(8) mononuclear cells/kg were infused, containing 0.6 +/- 0.4 x 10(6) CD3+CD8+ cells/kg. Six patients achieved hematologic and cytogenetic remission at 4, 8, 11, 15, 39, and 54 weeks after lymphocyte infusion. Two patients developed 〉 or = grade II acute GVHD, and 1 patient developed mild chronic GVHD. We conclude that donor lymphocyte infusions depleted of CD8+ cells can induce remissions with a low rate of severe acute GVHD in patients with CML who relapse after allogeneic BMT, supporting the hypothesis that CD8+ lymphocytes are important effectors of GVHD, but may not be essential for the graft-versus- leukemia effect against this disease. Further controlled studies are required to confirm these preliminary observations.
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: A developmental alternative splicing switch, involving exon 16 of protein 4.1 pre-mRNA, occurs during mammalian erythropoiesis. By controlling expression of a 21-amino acid peptide required for high- affinity interaction of protein 4.1 with spectrin and actin, this switch helps to regulate erythrocyte membrane mechanical stability. Here we show that key aspects of protein 4.1 structure and function are conserved in nucleated erythroid cells of the amphibian Xenopus laevis. Analysis of protein 4.1 cDNA sequences cloned from Xenopus erythrocytes and oocytes showed that tissue-specific alternative splicing of exon 16 also occurs in frogs. Importantly, functional studies with recombinant Xenopus erythroid 4.1 demonstrated specific binding to and mechanical stabilization of 4.1-deficient human erythrocyte membranes. Phylogenetic sequence comparison showed two evolutionarily conserved peptides that represent candidate spectrin-actin binding sites. Finally, in situ hybridization of early embryos showed high expression of 4.1 mRNA in ventral blood islands and in developing brain structures. These results demonstrate that regulated expression of structurally and functionally distinct protein 4.1 isoforms, mediated by tissue-specific alternative splicing, has been highly evolutionarily conserved. Moreover, both nucleated amphibian erythrocytes and their enucleated mammalian counterparts express 4.1 isoforms functionally competent for spectrin-actin binding.
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The recurrent t(12;21)(p12;q22) translocation fuses two genes, TEL and AML1, that have previously been shown to be independently involved in myeloid malignant proliferations. A search for rearrangement of the TEL locus in the region known to be involved in t(12;21) was performed by Southern blotting in a panel of hematopoietic malignancies. The presence of a t(12;21) was confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and/or reverse transcriptase (RT)-polymerase chain reaction (PCR). We report that fusion of TEL to AML1 is specifically observed in at least 16% of the childhood B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) investigated, none of which had been previously identified as harboring t(12;21).
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: The flt3 ligand is a growth factor that stimulates the proliferation of hematopoietic progenitor and stem cells. We established a sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to measure the concentration of flt3 ligand in plasma or serum from normal individuals, as well as in patients with hematopoietic disorders. Concentrations of flt3 ligand in plasma or serum from normal individuals were quite low: only 12% (7 of 60) of normal individuals had flt3 ligand levels above 100 pg/mL (the limit of detection). In contrast, 86% (19 of 22) of samples from patients with Fanconi anemia and 100% (eight of eight) of samples from patients with acquired aplastic anemia had plasma or serum levels above 100 pg/mL. Mean plasma or serum concentrations (calculated by assigning a value of 0 pg/mL to any sample reading below the level of detection) were as follows: normal volunteers, 14 pg/mL; patients with Fanconi anemia, 1,331 pg/mL; and patients with acquired aplastic anemia, 460 pg/mL. Concentrations of flt3 ligand in blood are, therefore, specifically elevated to a level that may be physiologically relevant in hematopoietic disorders with a suspected stem cell component. The elevated flt3 ligand concentrations in these individuals may be part of a compensatory hematopoietic response to boost the level of progenitor cells.
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 1995-12-01
    Description: Previous studies found that marrow allografts from DLA-identical littermates resulted in survival of 60% of recipient dogs after an otherwise lethal dose of 450 cGy of total body irradiation (TBI), either because of successful allografts or autologous recovery after rejection of the allografts. Forty percent of dogs died with marrow aplasia after allograft rejection. The current study asked whether allogeneic engraftment could be enhanced and survival improved by treating allograft recipients with high doses of corticosteroids or with cyclosporine (CSP), administered either before or after transplantation. Five dogs in group 1 received corticosteroids beginning on day -5 and ending on day 32 after transplant. The starting dose was 12.5 mg of prednisone per kilogram orally twice daily. All five dogs rejected their allografts; three died early with marrow aplasia and two showed endogenous marrow recovery. Nine dogs received CSP from day -6 to day -1 before transplantation at a dose of 20 mg/kg/d intravenously administered in divided doses. All nine dogs rejected the marrow allograft; six died with marrow aplasia and three survived with endogenous marrow recovery. Seven dogs received CSP after transplantation at a dose of 30 mg/kg/d orally from day -1 to day 35. All seven had sustained allografts (two mixed chimeras and five complete donor-type chimeras) and became healthy long-term survivors without graft-versus-host disease. These results extend previous observations and confirm that grafts of marrow from DLA-identical littermates improved survival of dogs exposed to low but otherwise lethal doses of TBI. Additional therapy with high-dose corticosteroids administered peritransplantation and posttransplantation or CSP administered before transplantation neither enhanced the rate of allogeneic engraftment nor improved survival; however, CSP administered after transplantation resulted in successful allografts and event-free survival in all cases.
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