Multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD) is an atypical lymphoproliferative disorder defined using clinical and pathologic criteria. A characteristic of the MCD is a close association with Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), which occurs during the clinical course of most human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated MCD cases and also, but less frequently, in HIV-negative patients. Recently, sequences of a putative new Herpesvirus (KSHV) have been isolated and further detected in almost all the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) KS and in most of the non-AIDS KS samples. In this study, we searched for these Herpesvirus-like sequences in MCD samples of 31 patients. KSHV sequences were detected in 14 of 14 cases of HIV-associated MCD, including 5 cases without detectable KS. Moreover, KSHV was detected in 7 of 17 MCD cases in HIV-negative patients, including 1 case associated with a cutaneous KS. In 34 non-MCD reactive lymph nodes (follicular and/or interfollicular hyperplasia) in HIV-negative patients, KSHV was detected in only 1 case. In 1 HIV-negative case of MCD, KSHV was found in both the lymph node and peripheral blood samples. These data suggest that KSHV could play a role in the pathogenesis of MCD, especially in HIV-infected patients.
The clinical and molecular pattern, as well as the response to therapy suggest that primary effusion lymphoma represents an heterogenous type of virus-induced B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder, sharing pathophysiological features with that induced by the Epstein-Barr virus and occurring in immunocompromised patients.
Castleman's disease (CD) is a rare atypical lymphoproliferative disorder that is morphologically and clinically heterogenous and is associated with a risk of developing malignant lymphoma. We report the clonality status of CD tissues in 34 patients, including 14 patients infected by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Four patients presented a localized form and 30 presented a multicentric form. Two cases were associated with B-cell lymphoma, 3 cases with Hodgkin's disease, and 9 cases (8 HIV+) with Kaposi's sarcoma. Histologically, 8 cases were of the hyaline-vascular type and 26 were of the plasma cell or mixed types. The Ig and T-cell receptor (TCR) V(D)J rearrangements were analyzed using polymerase chain reaction and Southern blot. Clonal IgH rearrangements were detected in only 4 cases, ie, 2 associated with B-cell lymphoma, 1 with Hodgkin's disease, and 1 case without malignancy. A TCR gamma rearrangement of restricted junctional size was amplified in 1 HIV+ case. Finally, polyclonal VH-JH and V gamma-J gamma rearrangements were detected in the large majority of the cases, irrespective of pathologic subtypes, clinical forms, and HIV status. The lymphoid component in CD is therefore commonly reactive, and the rare occurrence of detectable monoclonal lymphoid contingents may be caused by secondary molecular events.
Regulation of the human MHC class I HLA-A11 promoter is governed by a complex array of regulatory elements. One of these elements, shown here to be critical for the transcriptional activity of the promoter, was used to screen a lambda gt11 library and allowed the identification of a cDNA which coded for the zinc finger protein ZFX. ZFX was shown to bind the sequences AGGGCCCCA and AGGCCCCGA, located respectively at positions -271 to -263 and -242 to -234 of the HLA-A11 promoter, with similar affinities through its three C-terminal zinc fingers. ZFX575, a short isoform of ZFX, activates transcription from the HLA-All promoter in a Leydig cell line.
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