Despite the relevance of the c-kit/stem cell factor (SCF) signaling pathway in mast cell (MC) diseases, the exact frequency of KIT mutations in different compartments of bone marrow (BM) hematopoietic cells of individuals with systemic mastocytosis (SM), and its different diagnostic categories, remains unknown. In this study, we prospectively analyzed the presence of KIT mutations in fluorescence-activated cell-sorting (FACS)-purified populations of BM MCs (n ؍ 113) and other BM cell compartments (n ؍ 67) from adults with SM. Our results show the presence of D816V KIT mutation in virtually all adults (93%) with indolent and aggressive forms of SM, except welldifferentiated SM (29%), while other KIT mutations were rarely (< 3%) detected. In around one-third of patients with mutated MCs, the KIT mutation was also detected in CD34 ؉ hematopoietic cells and eosinophils, and, to a lesser extent, in monocytic, neutrophil-lineage BM precursor cells and lymphocytes. Most patient with poor-prognosis SM (81%) carried the KIT mutation in 2 or more BM myeloid cell populations, while this was detected in a smaller proportion (27%) of indolent cases. These results would support the notion that KIT mutation is a hallmark of adult SM where it targets a pluripotent hematopoietic stem cell, and may contribute to explaining previously observed discrepancies in the literature. IntroductionMast cell diseases (MCDs) are a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by an abnormal proliferation and accumulation of mast cells (MCs) in different tissues. In a relatively high proportion of cases, the clonal nature of the disease can be established on the basis of the demonstration of gain-of-function mutations involving the tyrosine kinase domain of c-kit in lesional skin and bone marrow (BM) cells. [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] Typically, the A71763T substitution is detected, whereby an aspartate is changed for a valine at codon 816 of the c-kit protein sequence. However, other uncommon somatic (V560G, 10 D815K, 11 D816Y, 2,11,12 D816F, 2,11 D816H, 13 and D820G 14 ) and germ-line (F522C, 15 A533D, 16 K509I, 17 and del419 18 ) mutations, which may result in a ligand-independent activation of the stem cell factor receptor, have been reported, most frequently in individual cases. Presence of the KIT mutations in patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM) is not restricted to BM MCs, but it has also been sporadically reported in other non-MC hematopoietic lineages, 7,[19][20][21][22][23][24] suggesting that expansion of clonal MCs may arise from an uncommitted hematopoietic stem cell. However, attempts to demonstrate the presence of KIT mutation in purified CD34 ϩ hematopoietic precursor cells have failed so far. 25 The pathogenetic relevance of the different KIT mutations in MCDs is still not fully understood; however, their identification has become of major prognostic significance 26 due to the availability of protein kinase inhibitors such as imatinib (STI571, Gleevec; Novartis, Basel, Switzerland). These new targeted drugs hav...
Background: Mastocytosis is a term used for a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by an abnormal proliferation and accumulation of mast cells (MCs) in one or multiple tissues including skin, bone marrow, liver, spleen, and lymph nodes, among others.Methods: In recent years, multiparameter flow cytometric studies have shown that pathologic MCs from patients with mastocytosis display unique aberrant immunophenotypic characteristics as compared with normal MCs.Results: Among other features, pathologic MCs show aberrant expression of CD25 and CD2 antigens and abnormally high levels of the CD11c and CD35 complement receptors, the CD59 complement regulatory molecule, the CD63 lysosomal membrane antigen, and the CD69 early-activation antigen. In addition, MCs from mastocytosis express abnormally low levels of CD117 and unexpectedly high light scatter and autofluorescence characteristics.Conclusions: These aberrant immunophenotypic features are of great relevance for the assessment of tissue involvement in mastocytosis with consequences in the diagnosis, classification, and follow-up of the disease and in its differential diagnosis with other entities. In this paper we provide the reader with information for the objective and reproducible identification of pathologic MCs by using quantitative multiparametric flow cytometry, information for their phenotypic characterization, and the criteria currently used for a correct interpretation of the immunophenotypic results obtained.
The ectoenzyme E-NPP3 (CD203c) has recently been identified as a novel activation-linked cell surface antigen on basophils. In the present study, we examined expression of CD203c on normal mast cells (MC) and bone marrow (bm) MC derived from 85 patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM), including cases with indolent SM (ISM, n=72), SM with associated clonal hematologic non-MC-lineage disease (SM-AHNMD, n=6), aggressive SM (ASM, n=3), and mast cell leukemia (MCL, n=4). Surface expression of CD203c was analyzed by multicolor flow cytometry. In patients with SM, bm MC expressed significantly higher amounts of CD203c compared to normal bm MC (median MFI in controls: 260 versus median MFI in SM: 516, p<0.05). Slightly lower amounts of CD203c were detected on MC in SM-AHNMD and ASM compared to ISM. To demonstrate CD203c expression in MC at the mRNA level, neoplastic MC were highly enriched by cell sorting, and were found to express CD203c mRNA in RT-PCR analysis. Cross-linking of the IgE receptor on MC resulted in a substantial upregulation of CD203c, whereas the KIT-ligand stem cell factor (SCF) showed no significant effects. In conclusion, CD203c is a novel activation-linked surface antigen on MC that is upregulated in response to IgE receptor cross-linking and is overexpressed on neoplastic MC in patients with SM.
Objective: To address the influence of thyroid hormones on circulating markers of cell-mediated immune response in an in vivo human model. Subjects and design: Twenty-two patients with stage I differentiated thyroid carcinoma were studied on the last day of thyroxine suppressive treatment, 4-7 days after withdrawal, and the day before whole body scanning. Three patients were excluded because of residual disease. Twenty euthyroid individuals served as controls. Serum thyrotrophin and thyroid hormones were measured by an immunometric assay, circulating cytokines by enzyme-linked immuno-sorbent assay and lymphoid populations by flow cytometry. Results: Thyroid function in patients changed from subclinical or mild hyperthyroidism at the first visit, to a situation of normal circulating levels of free thyroxine and triiodothyronine at the second, ending in a state of overt hypothyroidism. Thyroxine suppressive treatment in patients increased serum interleukin-18 concentrations (IL-18, mean^S.D., 280^122 vs 183^106 pg/ml, F ¼ 3.192, P ¼ 0.029), soluble interleukin-2 receptor levels (sIL-2R, 4368^1480 vs 2564^846 pg/ml, F ¼ 21.324, P , 0.001), and the percentage of natural killer (NK) cells in peripheral blood (15.9^8.6 vs 10.5^3.6%, F ¼ 4.977, P ¼ 0.004) compared with controls. After thyroxine withdrawal, serum levels of IL-18, sIL-2R and the percentage of NK cells decreased progressively. Conclusion: Our present results suggest that thyroid hormones modulate the cell-mediated immune response in humans. 153 223-230 European Journal of Endocrinology
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