Papamichail M et al. (SEP 1974)
Clinical and experimental immunology 18 1 1--11
T- and B-cell subpopulations in infectious mononucleosis.
Mononuclear cells separated from the blood in fourteen cases of infectious mononucleosis at various intervals from the onset were tested for the presence of surface immunoglobulin and for ability to form spontaneous rosettes with washed sheep red blood cells. The mononucleosis during the acute phase of the illness consisted largely of a T lymphocytosis. The absolute count of T lymphocytes returned to the normal range approximately 2 months after the onset of the illness. B cells (bearing surface immunoglobulin) were only slightly increased in the acute phase. In four cases appreciable numbers of fluorescent rosetting cells were also present,and investigation suggested that these were T cells coated with anti-T-cell autoantibody. During the first 2 weeks of the illness responsiveness to phytohaemagglutinin was severely depressed,but thereafter returned towards normal. It is thought likely that in infectious mononucleosis the vast majority of atypical mononuclear cells are T cells proliferating in response to E-B virus-infected B cells,and cytotoxic towards them.
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Newman RA et al. (MAY 1981)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 126 5 2024--30
The biochemical characterization of a cell surface antigen associated with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphocyte precursors.
The acute lymphoblastic leukemia- (ALL) associated membrane antigen is a single glycosylated polypeptide of approximate m.w. of 100,000 (gp100),containing no intrachain disulfide linkages. Approximately 50% of gp100 will bind to lentil lectin,whereas 100% will bind to the lectin from Ricinus communis. Both lentil-binding and lentil nonbinding forms of the antigen appear to be identical by 2-dimensional isoelectric focusing/SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and peptide mapping. Carbohydrate,although contributing approximately 20 to 25% of the m.w.,appears not to be involved in the antigenic site of the ALL antigen as judged by precipitation of a molecule after tunicamycin treatment of cells or glycosidase digestion. Charge shift electrophoresis and labeling with the lipophilic nitrene reagent hexanoyl diiodo-N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-tyramine suggests that the cALL antigen is probably not an integral membrane protein; however,it remains tightly bound to the plasma membrane after subcellular fractionation. A glycoprotein of the same m.w. has been detected by immunoprecipitation on bone marrow cells of nonleukemic patients. serologic studies indicate that the cALL-associated antigen is found on the terminal transferase-positive lymphoid cells,and it therefore seems likely that the gp100 molecule is a normal gene products of lymphocyte precursors.
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Moll R et al. (NOV 1982)
Cell 31 1 11--24
The catalog of human cytokeratins: patterns of expression in normal epithelia, tumors and cultured cells.
Takei F (JUN 1983)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 130 6 2794--7
Two surface antigens expressed on proliferating mouse T lymphocytes defined by rat monoclonal antibodies.
A hybrid cell line resulting from the fusion of a Con A-activated normal mouse spleen cell and a transformed mouse T cell (EL-4BU) has been used to prepare and select rat monoclonal antibodies reactive with molecules expressed on the surface of proliferating,as opposed to resting,mouse T cells. In this report,the characterization of two such antigens identified in this way is described. One antigen is a membrane component common to mitogen-activated T and B cells,some bone marrow cells,and various transformed cell lines but is not detectable on either normal thymocytes or the majority of spleen cells by radioimmunoassay or FACS analysis. It has a m.w. of approximately 200,000 daltons under nonreducing conditions and 100,000 daltons under reducing conditions. Antibodies to this antigen precipitate cell-bound transferrin but do not react directly with transferrin itself. It would thus appear that the antigen is the transferrin receptor molecule. The second antigen is not detectable on normal thymocytes,spleen cells,bone marrow cells,or mitogen-stimulated spleen cells but is expressed at high levels on some transformed T cell lines. It,too,appears to be a dimer,with a m.w. of 95,000 daltons under nonreducing conditions,decreasing to 50,000 daltons under reducing conditions. Although the function of the 95,000-dalton antigen is not yet known,its lack of expression on adult T cell populations both before and after activation suggests either a short-lived role at a very early stage of T cell development and/or an association with T cell transformation.
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Civin CI et al. (JUL 1984)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 133 1 157--65
Antigenic analysis of hematopoiesis. III. A hematopoietic progenitor cell surface antigen defined by a monoclonal antibody raised against KG-1a cells.
The anti-My-10 mouse monoclonal antibody was raised against the immature human myeloid cell line KG-1a and was selected for nonreactivity with mature human granulocytes. Anti-My-10 immunoprecipitated a KG-1a cell surface protein with an apparent Mr of approximately 115 kD. We describe the binding of this antibody to human hematopoietic cell types and show that My-10 is expressed specifically on immature normal human marrow cells,including hematopoietic progenitor cells. My-10 is also expressed by leukemic marrow cells from a subpopulation of patients. Thus,this antibody allows the identification and purification of hematopoietic progenitor cells from normal human marrow and the subclassification of leukemia.
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Sallan SE et al. (MAR 1980)
Blood 55 3 395--402
Cell surface antigens: prognostic implications in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Lymphoblasts from 93 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were characterized by immunologic cell surface markers. These patients were treated on a single protocol,featuring adriamycin therapy during remission,and have been followed from 2 to 6.5 yr (median 4 yr). Three classes of patients were defined serologically: HTA+ Ia- CALLA-,Ia+ CALLA+ HTA-,and Ia+ CALLA- HTA-. Disease-free survival and sites of relapse were assessed within immunologic subsets. Similar to the findings of others,T-cell (HTA+ Ia-) patients fared poorly as compared to non-T-cell (Ia+ HTA-) patients (median disease-free survival was 12 and 47 mo. respectively; p = 0.0004). The majority of relapses in the HTA+ patients occurred at extramedullary sites. Late testicular relapse was rare among Ia+ patients. In addition,the common ALL antigen" (CALLA) may identify a relatively favorable subset within the Ia+ population. The prognostic value of the immunologic markers was compared with traditional clinical factors. There was much overlap between HTA+
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Trowbridge IS et al. (MAR 1982)
Immunogenetics 15 3 299--312
Biochemical characterization and cellular distribution of a polymorphic, murine cell-surface glycoprotein expressed on lymphoid tissues.
A murine leukocyte surface glycoprotein (Mr = 95 000) has been defined by means of xenogeneic monoclonal antibodies. In normal hematopoietic tissues,the glycoprotein is found in highest amounts in the bone marrow. Flow cytometric analysis shows that essentially all bone-marrow cells express the glycoprotein and that it is a major component of a subpopulation of cells containing predominantly granulocytic precursors. In contrast,only about 5 percent of thymocytes express sufficient glycoprotein to be detected by flow cytometric analysis,although under stringent conditions up to 20 percent of thymocytes are susceptible to complement-mediated cytotoxicity using a monoclonal antibody against the glycoprotein. Functional assays showed that both prothymocytes and colony forming unit-spleen express the glycoprotein which is broadly distributed on murine hematopoietic tumor cell lines. However,although some Thy-1+ (T) cell lymphomas express large amounts of the glycoprotein,others do not express detectable quantities of the molecule. The glycoprotein is not restricted to hematopoietic cells and can be detected on lung,kidney,brain,and liver as well as cultured fibroblasts. Monoclonal antibodies against the glycoprotein cross-react with an antigen present on human cells. As described in the accompanying paper,the glycoprotein exists in two antithetical allelic forms and we show that it is identical to a polymorphic surface molecule independently characterized by Colombatti and co-workers.
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Sammar M et al. (JUL 1994)
International immunology 6 7 1027--36
Heat-stable antigen (CD24) as ligand for mouse P-selectin.
Heat-stable antigen (HSA)/CD24 is a cell surface molecule expressed by many cell types in the mouse. The molecule has an unusual structure because of its small protein core and extensive glycosylation. In order to study the functional role of the HSA-associated glycoconjugates we have isolated different forms of HSA. Using lectin analysis we provide evidence for extensive heterogeneity in carbohydrate composition and sialic acid linkage. Several HSA forms were recognized by mouse P-selectin-IgG but not E-selectin-IgG in ELISA. As expected,P-selectin-IgG also bound to L2/HNK-1-positive neural glycoproteins (L2-glycoproteins) and sulfatides but not to gangliosides and other control glycoproteins. The binding of P-selectin-IgG to L2-glycoproteins and HSA required bivalent cations. The reactivity to HSA was sensitive to sialidase treatment whereas the binding to L2-glycoproteins was not. Studies with alpha 2-6 sialytransferase indicated that alpha 2-6 linked sialic acid was not involved in the P-selectin binding to HSA. Surprisingly,an L2/HNK-1 specific antibody was found to cross-react with some HSA glycoforms and its binding correlated with P-selectin-IgG reactivity. L2/HNK-1-positive or L2/HNK-1-negative HSA glycoforms were also analyzed after coating to polystyrene beads. Only the L2/HNK-1-positive HSA coated beads were reactive with P-selectin-IgG and could bind to activated bend3 endothelioma cells expressing P-selectin whereas the L2/HNK-1-negative HSA beads did not. It is suggested that in its L2/HNK-1 modified form the HSA molecule on leukocytes could represent a ligand for P-selectin on endothelial cells or platelets.
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McGuckin MA et al. (APR 1995)
Human pathology 26 4 432--9
Prognostic significance of MUC1 epithelial mucin expression in breast cancer.
The epithelial mucin produced by the MUC1 gene is present in the apical cell membrane of normal breast epithelial cells and is highly expressed in many breast cancers. Several studies have provided conflicting evidence regarding the relationship between MUC1 expression and survival in breast cancer patients. In this study a detailed immunohistological analysis of MUC1 expression was performed using monoclonal antibody BC2 and was related to other tumor characteristics and patient survival. Patients whose tumors showed MUC1 expression in greater than 75% of tumor cells had significantly poorer disease-free and overall survival (P textless .05). The proportion of cells showing cytoplasmic MUC1 expression was prognostically significant,but the proportion of cells that lined gland spaces showing apical membrane staining was of no prognostic significance. A high level of MUC1 expression was significantly associated with the presence of axillary node metastases and estrogen receptors but not with other tumor characteristics.
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Bain G et al. (APR 1995)
Developmental biology 168 2 342--57
Embryonic stem cells express neuronal properties in vitro.
Mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells cultured as aggregates and exposed to retinoic acid are induced to express multiple phenotypes normally associated with neurons. A large percentage of treated aggregates produce a rich neuritic outgrowth. Dissociating the induced aggregates with trypsin and plating the cells as a monolayer results in cultures in which a sizable percentage of the cells have a neuronal appearance. These neuron-like cells express class III beta-tubulin and the neurofilament M subunit. Induced cultures express transcripts for neural-associated genes including the neurofilament L subunit,glutamate receptor subunits,the transcription factor Brn-3,and GFAP. Levels of neurofilament L and GAD67 and GAD65 transcripts rise dramatically upon induction. Physiological studies show that the neuron-like cells generate action potentials and express TTX-sensitive sodium channels,as well as voltage-gated potassium channels and calcium channels. We conclude that a complex system of neuronal gene expression can be activated in cultured ES cells. This system should be favorable for investigating some of the mechanisms that regulate neuronal differentiation.
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Johansson BM and Wiles MV (JAN 1995)
Molecular and cellular biology 15 1 141--51
Evidence for involvement of activin A and bone morphogenetic protein 4 in mammalian mesoderm and hematopoietic development.
Xenopus in vitro studies have implicated both transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) families in mesoderm induction. Although members of both families are present during mouse mesoderm formation,there is little evidence for their functional role in mesoderm induction. We show that mouse embryonic stem cells,which resemble primitive ectoderm,can differentiate to mesoderm in vitro in a chemically defined medium (CDM) in the absence of fetal bovine serum. In CDM,this differentiation is responsive to TGF-beta family members in a concentration-dependent manner,with activin A mediating the formation of dorsoanterior-like mesoderm and bone morphogenetic protein 4 mediating the formation of ventral mesoderm,including hematopoietic precursors. These effects are not observed in CDM alone or when TGF-beta 1,-beta 2,or -beta 3,acid FGF,or basic FGF is added individually to CDM. In vivo,at day 6.5 of mouse development,activin beta A RNA is detectable in the decidua and bone morphogenetic protein 4 RNA is detectable in the egg cylinder. Together,our data strongly implicate the TGF-beta family in mammalian mesoderm development and hematopoietic cell formation.
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Foster DC et al. (DEC 1994)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 91 26 13023--7
Human thrombopoietin: gene structure, cDNA sequence, expression, and chromosomal localization.
Thrombopoietin (TPO),a lineage-specific cytokine affecting the proliferation and maturation of megakaryocytes from committed progenitor cells,is believed to be the major physiological regulator of circulating platelet levels. Recently we have isolated a cDNA encoding a ligand for the murine c-mpl protooncogene and shown it to be TPO. By employing a murine cDNA probe,we have isolated a gene encoding human TPO from a human genomic library. The TPO locus spans over 6 kb and has a structure similar to that of the erythropoietin gene (EPO). Southern blot analysis of human genomic DNA reveals a hybridization pattern consistent with a single gene locus. The locus was mapped by in situ hybridization of metaphase chromosome preparations to chromosome 3q26-27,a site where a number of chromosomal abnormalities associated with thrombocythemia in cases of acute myeloid leukemia have been mapped. A human TPO cDNA was isolated by PCR from kidney mRNA. The cDNA encodes a protein with 80% identity to previously described murine TPO and is capable of initiating a proliferative signal to murine interleukin 3-dependent BaF3 cells expressing the murine or human TPO receptor.
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