Product Citations: 6

Loss of PBRM1 rescues VHL dependent replication stress to promote renal carcinogenesis.

In Nature Communications on 11 December 2017 by Espana-Agusti, J., Warren, A., et al.

Inactivation of the VHL (Von Hippel Lindau) tumour suppressor has long been recognised as necessary for the pathogenesis of clear cell renal cancer (ccRCC); however, the molecular mechanisms underlying transformation and the requirement for additional genetic hits remain unclear. Here, we show that loss of VHL alone results in DNA replication stress and damage accumulation, effects that constrain cellular growth and transformation. By contrast, concomitant loss of the chromatin remodelling factor PBRM1 (mutated in 40% of ccRCC) rescues VHL-induced replication stress, maintaining cellular fitness and allowing proliferation. In line with these data we demonstrate that combined deletion of Vhl and Pbrm1 in the mouse kidney is sufficient for the development of fully-penetrant, multifocal carcinomas, closely mimicking human ccRCC. Our results illustrate how VHL and PBRM1 co-operate to drive renal transformation and uncover replication stress as an underlying vulnerability of all VHL mutated renal cancers that could be therapeutically exploited.

Myelomastocytic leukemia is a term used for patients with advanced myeloid neoplasms, in whom elevated numbers of immature atypical mast cells are found, but criteria for a primary mast cell disease are not met. The origin of mast cells in these patients is presently unknown.
We have analyzed clonality of mast cells in an 18-year-old patient suffering from acute myeloid leukemia with a complex karyotype including a t(8;21) and mastocytic transformation with a huge increase in immature mast cells and elevated serum tryptase level, but no evidence for a primary mast cell disease/mastocytosis.
As assessed by in situ fluorescence hybridization combined with tryptase staining, both the tryptase-negative blast cells and the tryptase-positive mast cells were found to contain the t(8;21)-specific AML1/ETO fusion gene. Myeloablative stem cell transplantation resulted in complete remission with consecutive disappearance of AML1/ETO transcripts, decrease of serum tryptase to normal range, and disappearance of neoplastic mast cells.
These data suggest that mast cells directly derive from the leukemic clone in patients with myelomastocytic leukemia.

  • Cancer Research
  • Stem Cells and Developmental Biology

The in vitro proliferation of T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cells in its entirety has not been well delineated because of a lack of an appropriate culture system that mimics the growth pattern in a living body. We applied a NOD/SCID mouse fetal thymus organ culture (FTOC) for leukemic cells from fresh (one case) and frozen (seven cases) bone marrow (BM) samples of children with T-ALL. Cell growth was observed in all seven samples in the culture, reaching a proliferational peak at 4 weeks, and it was calculated that the proliferation potential was 212-to 319-fold. The FTOC-derived T-ALL cells showed similarity to the original cells morphologically and immunophenotypically, still possessed clonalities and were able to regenerate overt leukemia in NOD/SCID mice. These FTOC-derived T-ALL cells differed from ordinary cell lines because they always need FTOC support. Thus, we established a new in vitro culture for T-ALL cells. A comparison of the original and FTOC-derived T-ALL cells revealed that the proportion of cells expressing IL-7R increased in all seven cases. Sorting and re-seeding of FTOC-derived IL-7R+ and IL-7R- cells into secondary FTOC resulted in a predominant generation of IL-7R+ cells from both fractions, while IL-7R- cells proliferated more potently than did IL-7R+ cells, suggesting that a pathway for the conversion of IL-7R- to IL-7R+ exists during the proliferation of T-ALL lymphoblasts. Addition of exogenous IL-7 or neutralization with anti-IL-7 antibody did not influence the growth pattern of T-ALL cells in FTOC. The current study provides a unique assay system for the exploration of the hierarchy within human T-lymphoid leukemic cells, and should facilitate the establishment of novel therapeutic modalities.

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Comparison of multiparameter flow cytometry with cluster analysis and immunohistochemistry for the detection of CD10 in diffuse large B-Cell lymphomas.

In Modern Pathology : An Official Journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc on 1 April 2002 by Xu, Y., McKenna, R. W., et al.

CD10 is a critical antigen for the distinction of follicle-center lymphoma from other B-cell lymphomas composed of small cells in fine-needle aspiration specimens, tissue core biopsies, and bone marrow. In addition, CD10 is expressed in a subset of diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs), where it may be an adverse prognostic indicator. We have previously demonstrated that CD10 expression detected by multiparameter flow cytometry (FC) with cluster analysis is highly sensitive and specific for follicle-center lymphoma in the differential diagnosis of small B-cell lymphomas. In this study, we assessed the utility of paraffin section immunohistochemistry (IHC) for CD10 compared with FC in a cohort of 50 DLBCLs. IHC for CD10 was technically successful in 47 of the 50 (94%) DLBCLs; 3 failed based on lack of internal CD10 reactivity. CD10 was expressed by FC in 20 of 47 DLBCLs (43%); CD10 was positive by IHC in 15 of these (75%). All 27 cases that were CD10(-) by FC were negative by IHC. The level of CD10 expression by FC in the 5 FC(+)/IHC(-) cases ranged from relatively dim to bright. Our results indicate 75% sensitivity and 100% specificity of CD10 expression by IHC compared with multiparameter FC with cluster analysis and a 6% technical failure rate.

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology
  • Pathology

The immediate-early gene ie14/vsag of herpesvirus saimiri has homology with murine superantigens. We compared the pathogenesis of infection with either ie14/vsag deletion mutants or wild-type virus C488 in cottontop tamarin monkeys (Saguinus oedipus). Two weeks after infection, all animals developed acute T-cell lymphomas independently of the presence of the viral ie14/vsag gene.

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology
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