Chromosomal deletions of band 13q14 occur recurrently in BCR/ABL negative chronic myeloproliferative disorders (CMPD), including myelosclerosis with myeloid metaplasia (MMM), polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythemia (ET), juvenile chronic myeloid leukemia (JCML), and the so-called BCR/ABL- chronic myeloid leukemia (CML).
To develop a new method to evaluate autoantibodies in various autoimmune bullous skin diseases, we examined reactivity of bullous pemphigoid (BP) and pemphigus vulgaris (PV) patients' sera with partial bacterial fusion proteins of the 230 kD BP antigen (BPAG1) and PV antigen, respectively, by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and compared the results with those of immunoblotting.
We report results of bcr analysis by Southern hybridization in 37 patients with MPDs other than CML: ET (20 cases), PV (seven cases). unclassified MPD (nine cases), as well as in one case of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). bcr negativity ruled out CML in 36 cases, confirming the morphologic diagnosis.In one case diagnosed as ET. bcr gene rearrangement was diagnostic of CML.
Human erythroid malignancies (polycythemia vera [PV] and erythroleukemia) are associated with erythropoietin (Epo)-independent growth and differentiation.
Polycythaemia vera (PV) is a myeloproliferative disorder characterized by haematopoietic progenitor cells being hypersensitive to cytokines such as erythropoietin, interleukin-3, stem cell factor and insulin-like growth factor 1, which results in an increased production of mature blood cells.
No evidence for an altered mRNA expression or protein level of haematopoietic cell phosphatase in CD34+ bone marrow progenitor cells or mature peripheral blood cells in polycythaemia vera.
In one of these families, the in vitro behavior of erythroid progenitors in serum-containing cultures without the addition of EPO mimicked the behavior of polycythemia vera progenitors; however, we show that antibodies against either EPO or the EPOR distinguish the in vitro growth abnormality of polycythemia vera erythroid progenitors from that seen in this particular PFCP family.
Polycythemia vera (PV) is an acquired clonal disorder characterized by increased production of mature red cells and growth of erythroid colonies in the absence of erythropoietin.
Deregulation of this splicing system in early hematopoietic progenitors possibly explains the profound decrease in EPOR-T mRNA and consequent pathophysiology of PV.
Samples of PV and ET analyzed in chronic phase disease were consistently devoid of all genetic lesions tested, suggesting that alterations of TP53, NRAS, KRAS, and MDM2 do not contribute significantly to development of chronic phase PV and ET.
These data indicate that inactivation of TP53 is a relatively frequent event associated with the blastic transformation of PV and ET and may be responsible for the tumor progression of these disorders.
Polycythaemia vera (PV) is a myeloproliferative disorder characterized by haematopoietic progenitor cells being hypersensitive to cytokines such as erythropoietin, interleukin-3, stem cell factor and insulin-like growth factor 1, which results in an increased production of mature blood cells.
Polycythaemia vera (PV) is a myeloproliferative disorder characterized by haematopoietic progenitor cells being hypersensitive to cytokines such as erythropoietin, interleukin-3, stem cell factor and insulin-like growth factor 1, which results in an increased production of mature blood cells.
In addition to TP53 mutations, cases of blastic phase PV and ET occasionally harbored mutations of NRAS (one case of blastic phase ET) or displayed MSI (one case of blastic phase PV).
Normally, erythropoietin is essential for the survival and proliferation of erythroid progenitors; however in polycythemia vera the erythroid progenitor cells can survive and develop in the absence of erythropoietin.