We recently demonstrated a higher incidence of monocyte esterase deficiency in patients with lymphoproliferative neoplasia and gastrointestinal carcinoma than in the normal population. Using lactoferrin to stimulate monocyte cytotoxicity we have now compared the abilities of esterase positive and esterase deficient monocytes to lyse K562 cells. The esterase deficient monocytes were from normal subjects whose monocytes have consistently failed to show cytochemical esterase staining over 30-72 months and which lack specific monocyte isoenzymes. The esterase positive monocytes were from age and sex matched control subjects. Esterase positive monocytes responded to lactoferrin stimulation by a five-fold increase in cytotoxicity whereas deficient monocytes failed to produce any response. These results indicate a possible defect in cytotoxicity of esterase deficient monocytes and together with the epidemiological findings suggest a link between monocyte esterase deficiency and neoplasia.
A survey of the incidence of monocyte esterase deficiency in 4000 inpatients (including 808 with malignant neoplastic disease) and 474 normal controls was performed using an automated esterase method. A highly significant excess of patients with malignant disease and the deficiency was evident when compared with normal controls or all other patients. Within the group of patients with malignant disease the demonstrable excess occurred in B chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, non-Hodgkin's and Hodgkin's lymphoma, and carcinoma of the gastrointestinal tract. There was also a significant excess of patients with the deficiency attending the renal unit, both among patients who had had renal transplants and those who had not. A familial incidence of monocyte esterase . deficiency was found in 19 (35%) of first degree relatives of those patients in whom family studies were done.It is suggested that the reason for the increased prevalence of the anomaly in these disorders might be that the diminution of esterase activity has a role in their development.
Aims-To substantiate the high incidence of monocyte esterase deficiency (MED) longer disease free survival in the MED cohort and increased occurrence of benign neoplasms-largely colorectal polyps-in this group also. Three patients had a borderline degree of deficiency and were excluded from comparisons, although they showed the same clinical tendencies as the MED group.
Monocyte-enriched and lymphocyte-enriched fractions of peripheral blood from three healthy volunteers were obtained by percoll density gradient centrifugation. The cytotoxic activity of each fraction against 51Cr-labelled K562 cells was quantified in a 2-h assay using freshly isolated cells of each fraction and cells of each fraction which had been incubated with and without lactoferrin in complete medium for 18 h before performing the assay. We have thereby shown that cytotoxicity was not demonstrable in the lymphocyte fraction (containing 7.3 +/- 2% large granular lymphocytes) after 18 h in medium, whereas the cytotoxicity of the monocyte fraction (containing 3 +/- 0.4% large granular lymphocytes) was still significantly increased (P less than or equal to 0.01) and that lactoferrin had no effect on lymphocyte fraction cytotoxicity while producing an 11-fold increase in the cytotoxicity of the monocyte fraction. It is therefore possible to perform a relatively simple test of monocyte cytotoxicity using lactoferrin as a stimulant in a 2-h 51Cr-labelled K562 assay system by allowing 18 h to elapse for lymphocyte natural killer cytotoxicity to decay.
Deficiency of the monocyte ectoenzyme non-specific esterase is described in a heredofamilial pattern in four patients with rheumatoid arthritis. No association with HLA status or rheumatoid factor seropositivity was found.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.