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  • Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with combined TP53 mutation and MIR34A methylation: Another "double hit" lymphoma with very poor outcome? 24722400

    MiR34A, B and C have been implicated in lymphomagenesis, but information on their role in normal CD19+ B-cells (PBL-B) and de novo diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is limited. We show that in normal and activated B-cells miR34A-5p plays a dominant role compared to other miR34 family members. Only miR34A-5p is expressed in PBL-B, and significantly induced in activated B-cells and reactive lymph nodes. In PBL-B, the MIR34A and MIR34B/C promoters are unmethylated, but the latter shows enrichment for the H3K4me3/H3K27me3 silencing mark. Nine de novo DLBCL cases (n=150) carry both TP53 mutation and MIR34A methylation ("double hit") and these patients have an exceedingly poor prognosis with a median survival of 9.4 months (Pless than 0.0001), while neither TP53 mutation, MIR34A or MIR34B/C promoter methylation alone ("single hit") influence on survival. The TP53/MIR34A "double-hit" is an independent negative prognostic factor for survival (P=0.0002). In 2 DLBCL-cell lines with both TP53 mutation and promoter methylation of MIR34A, miR34A-5p is upregulated by 5-aza-2'deoxycytidine. Thus, the TP53/MIR34A "double hit" characterizes a very aggressive subgroup of DLBCL, which may be treatable with epigenetic therapy prior to or in combination with conventional immunochemotherapy.
    Tipo de documento:
    Referencia
    Referencia del producto:
    17-622
    Nombre del producto:
    ChIPAb+ Trimethyl-Histone H3 (Lys27) - ChIP Validated Antibody and Primer Set
  • RANK Expression as a cell surface marker of human osteoclast precursors in peripheral blood, bone marrow, and giant cell tumors of bone. 16939392

    RANK expression in vivo on hematopoietic subsets including pre-osteoclasts, identified by monoclonal antibodies, has not been described. We describe the lineages that express RANK in bone marrow, peripheral blood, and GCTs. We show that CD14(+)RANK(high) cells constitute a circulating pre-osteoclast pool. INTRODUCTION: The expression of RANK by subsets of hematopoietic cells has not been adequately studied in humans. While attributed to the monocytoid lineage, the phenotype of the pre-osteoclast (pre-OC) with respect to RANK expression in vivo remains unclear. We tested monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) raised against the extracellular domain of recombinant human RANK for reactivity with normal peripheral blood (PB) and bone marrow (BM) mononuclear cells (PBMNCs and BMMNCs, respectively). We also tested reactivity with giant cell tumor cells (GCT), a confirmed source of pre-OC and mature OCs. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Human PBMNCs, BMMNCs, and GCT cells were analyzed for reactivity with anti-RANK MAbs by flow cytometry in combination with hematopoietic lineage restricted markers. GCTs were also analyzed by immunofluorescence. CD14+ monocytoid cells were sorted by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) based on their relative RANK expression and cultured under OC-forming conditions. RESULTS: RANK+ cells were detected similarly by three independent anti-RANK MAbs. One MAb (80736) immunoprecipitated RANK-RANKL complexes from surface-biotinylated GCT lysates. Using dual-color flow cytometry, RANK was detected on CD14+ (monocytoid), CD19+ (B-lymphoid), CD56+ (NK cell), and glycophorin A+ erythroid progenitors. Minor populations of both CD3+ T lymphocytes and BM CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors also expressed cell surface RANK. In GCTs, RANK expression was identified on mononuclear CD45(+)CD14(+)alphaVbeta3(+)c-Fms+ cells, likely to be committed pre-OC, and on multinucleated CD45(+)alphaVbeta3(+)TRACP(+) OCs. Importantly, sorted CD14(+)RANK(high) PBMNCs treated with recombinant RANKL and macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) gave rise to approximately twice the number of osteoclasts than RANK(mid) or RANK(low) cells. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that committed monocytoid RANK+ pre-OCs are represented in the marrow and circulate in the periphery, forming a pool of cells capable of responding rapidly to RANKL. The ability to reliably detect committed pre-OC in peripheral blood could have important clinical applications in the management of diseases characterized by abnormal osteoclastic activity.
    Tipo de documento:
    Referencia
    Referencia del producto:
    MAB1976
    Nombre del producto:
    Anti-Integrin αVβ3 Antibody, clone LM609
  • Aberrant expression of CD19 in AML with t(8;21) involves a poised chromatin structure and PAX5. 20208555

    Correct hematopoietic differentiation requires the tightly regulated execution of lineage-specific and stage-restricted gene expression programs. This process is disturbed in hematological malignancies that typically show incomplete differentiation but often also display a mixed lineage phenotype. Co-expression of lymphoid and myeloid molecules is a well-known feature of acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) with t(8;21). These cells consistently express the B-cell-specific transcription factor PAX5, and the B-cell-specific cell surface protein CD19. However, the functional consequences of PAX5 expression are unknown. To address this question, we studied the chromatin features of CD19, which is a direct target of PAX5 in cells with and without the t(8;21) chromosomal translocation. We show that CD19 chromatin exists in a poised configuration in myeloid progenitors and that this poised chromatin structure facilitates PAX5-dependent CD19 activation. Our results also show a positive correlation between PAX5 and CD19 expression in t(8;21)-positive AML cells and demonstrate that PAX5 binds to the promoter and enhancer of CD19 gene and remodels chromatin structure at the promoter. This study shows that expression of PAX5 in leukemic cells has functional consequences and points to an important role of a progenitor-specific chromatin configuration in myeloid leukemia.
    Tipo de documento:
    Referencia
    Referencia del producto:
    AB4227
  • Epigenetic processes play a major role in B-cell-specific gene silencing in classical Hodgkin lymphoma. 16304050

    Many B-lineage-specific genes are down-regulated in Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells of classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL). We investigated the involvement of epigenetic modifications in gene silencing in cHL cell lines and in microdissected primary HRS cells. We assessed the expression and methylation status of CD19, CD20, CD79B, SYK, PU.1, BOB.1/OBF.1, BCMA, and LCK, all of which are typically down-regulated in cHL. We could reactivate gene expression in cHL cell lines with the DNA demethylating agent 5-aza-deoxycytidine (5-aza-dC). Using methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (MSP), bisulfite genomic sequencing, and digestion with methylation-sensitive endonuclease followed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), we determined the methylation status of promoter regions of PU.1, BOB.1/OBF.1, CD19, SYK, and CD79B. Down-regulation of transcription typically correlated with hypermethylation. Using bisulfite genomic sequencing we found that in microdissected HRS cells of primary cHL SYK, BOB.1/OBF.1, and CD79B promoters were also hypermethylated. Ectopic expression of both Oct2 and PU.1 in a cHL cell line potentiated endogenous PU.1 and SYK expression after 5-aza-dC treatment. These observations indicate that silencing of the B-cell-specific genes in cHL may be the consequence of a compromised regulatory network where down-regulation of a few master transcription factors results in silencing of numerous genes.
    Tipo de documento:
    Referencia
    Referencia del producto:
    S7820
  • A novel tumour-suppressor function for the Notch pathway in myeloid leukaemia. 21562564

    Notch signalling is a central regulator of differentiation in a variety of organisms and tissue types. Its activity is controlled by the multi-subunit γ-secretase (γSE) complex. Although Notch signalling can play both oncogenic and tumour-suppressor roles in solid tumours, in the haematopoietic system it is exclusively oncogenic, notably in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, a disease characterized by Notch1-activating mutations. Here we identify novel somatic-inactivating Notch pathway mutations in a fraction of patients with chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia (CMML). Inactivation of Notch signalling in mouse haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) results in an aberrant accumulation of granulocyte/monocyte progenitors (GMPs), extramedullary haematopoieisis and the induction of CMML-like disease. Transcriptome analysis revealed that Notch signalling regulates an extensive myelomonocytic-specific gene signature, through the direct suppression of gene transcription by the Notch target Hes1. Our studies identify a novel role for Notch signalling during early haematopoietic stem cell differentiation and suggest that the Notch pathway can play both tumour-promoting and -suppressive roles within the same tissue.
    Tipo de documento:
    Referencia
    Referencia del producto:
    MAB1501R
    Nombre del producto:
    Anti-Actin Antibody,clone C4