SURFACE AND CYTOPLASMIC EXPRESSION OF CD45 ANTIGEN ISOFORMS IN NORMAL AND MALIGNANT MYELOID CELL-DIFFERENTIATION

被引:30
|
作者
CALDWELL, CW [1 ]
PATTERSON, WP [1 ]
TOALSON, BD [1 ]
YESUS, YW [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV MISSOURI,MED CTR,SCH MED,DEPT MED,COLUMBIA,MO 65201
关键词
D O I
10.1093/ajcp/95.2.180
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 ;
摘要
The CD45 family contains protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) activity and is expressed in one or more of its isoforms on all lymphohematopoietic cells. Considerable work has focused on CD45 expression by lymphoid cells, but minimal work has involved granulocytes. Granulocytic, or myeloid, cell differentiation is accompanied by a number of morphologic and immunophenotypic changes. This study used flow cytometric and immunocytochemical methods in conjunction with morphologic assessment to investigate the expression of CD45 isoforms during differentiation of normal and malignant granulocytic cells. On normal bone marrow cells, the quantity of surface CD45 did not change during earlier stages but did increase significantly at the terminal stages (bands and polymorphonuclear leukocytes [PMNs]). CD45RO (the low relative molecular mass [M(r)] isoform) was very dimly expressed on immature cells but became increasingly brighter beginning at approximately the myelocyte stage. The high M(r) isoform (CD45RA) was virtually absent from the cell surface at all stages. Only a small percentage (3-15%) of PMNs expressed surface CD45RA. However, there was a cytoplasmic pool of each isoform associated with membrane-bound granules found throughout differentiation, with remarkable increases in expression at the terminal stages. In the case of acute myeloid leukemias (AMLs), most cases expressed surface CD45RA with, or without, CD45RO, regardless of their French-American-British (FAB) classification. This appeared to be a stable process at diagnosis and relapse in individual patients and may therefore serve as a diagnostic aid. The biologic significance of this aberrant expression of CD45RA by malignant cells is unknown but raises important questions regarding the cellular processes of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation in normal and malignant cells.
引用
收藏
页码:180 / 187
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] ROLE OF INDIVIDUAL CD45 ISOFORMS IN T-CELL ACTIVATION
    MCKENNEY, DW
    GORMAN, L
    ROTHSTEIN, DM
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 1994, 5 (03): : 984 - 984
  • [32] Usefulness of RA and RO isoforms of common leukocyte antigen (CD45) for early distinction between normal and abnormal promyelocytes
    D'Arena, G
    Cascavilla, N
    Nunziata, G
    Perla, G
    Matera, R
    Carella, AM
    Pistolese, G
    LEUKEMIA & LYMPHOMA, 2002, 43 (09) : 1823 - 1825
  • [33] REGULATION OF TYPE C RNA VIRUS EXPRESSION DURING NORMAL MYELOID CELL-DIFFERENTIATION
    LIEBERMAN, D
    HOFFMANLIEBERMAN, B
    SACHS, L
    ISRAEL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCES, 1980, 16 (06): : 486 - 486
  • [34] CD45 isoforms on human CD4(+) T-cell subsets
    Shanafelt, MC
    Yssel, H
    Soderberg, C
    Steinman, L
    Adelman, DC
    Peltz, G
    Lahesmaa, R
    JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 1996, 98 (02) : 433 - 440
  • [35] ASSOCIATION OF THE EXPRESSION OF A NOVEL CYCLOPHILIN WITH MYELOID CELL-DIFFERENTIATION
    GIARDINA, SL
    COFFMAN, JD
    YOUNG, HA
    POTTER, SJ
    FREY, JL
    ORTALDO, JR
    ANDERSON, SK
    FASEB JOURNAL, 1994, 8 (04): : A215 - A215
  • [36] EXPRESSION OF CD45 ON T-CELL POPULATIONS
    LIGHTSTONE, E
    MARVEL, J
    IMMUNOLOGY TODAY, 1990, 11 (12): : 432 - 432
  • [37] EXPRESSION OF FGR PROTOONCOGENE DURING MYELOID CELL-DIFFERENTIATION
    MIYAZAKI, Y
    KATAMINE, S
    KOHNO, T
    MORIUCHI, R
    MIYAMOTO, T
    TOMONAGA, M
    EXPERIMENTAL HEMATOLOGY, 1992, 20 (06) : 802 - 802
  • [38] EXPRESSION OF CD45 ISOFORMS BY HUMAN T-CELLS IS DEVELOPMENTALLY REGULATED
    ROSEN, J
    MACNAMARA, J
    BOTTOMLY, K
    CARDING, SR
    JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 1993, 150 (08): : A109 - A109
  • [39] EXPRESSION OF MYELOID DIFFERENTIATION ANTIGENS ON NORMAL AND MALIGNANT MYELOID CELLS
    GRIFFIN, JD
    RITZ, J
    NADLER, LM
    SCHLOSSMAN, SF
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1981, 68 (04): : 932 - 941