SummaryInduction of procoagulant factors in malignant cells is considered to be the major cause of coagulation disorders in cancer. Thrombomodulin (TM), a negative regulator of coagulation was also found to be expressed in cancer cells. We report here evidence for another anticoagulant, the endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR), in cancer cells. EPCR was detected in several cell lines derived from various types of cancer. Significant levels of protein C (PC) activation were detected only with cell lines expressed both EPCR and TM. Anti-EPCR monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) specifically inhibited the activation. Thus, EPCR function appears to be important for PC activation by cancer cells. In addition, we detected EPCR expression in tumor cells from breast cancer patients, with an extremely high frequency. EPCR function may contribute to progression or pathogenesis of some types of cancer, and may explain the complexity of coagulopathy in cancer patients.
Essential thrombocythemia (ET), one of the chronic myeloproliferative disorders, is a clonal disorder of multipotent stem cells. Although most patients with ET have a prolonged benign course, a minority of patients may develop a blastic crisis similar to chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). A case of ET terminating in blastic crisis 8 years after the initial diagnosis is presented. The blast cells were cytochemically and immunophenotypically consistent with the acute myelogenous leukemia with minimal myeloid differentiation subtype of the FAB classification. From the review of the literature on blastic transformation of ET, acute leukemia with an M4 or M7 phenotype occurred more frequently. In addition, three valuable factors to predict the leukemic transformation of ET appear to be karyotypic abnormalities, such as involvement of chromosome 21, previous therapies with a mutagenic potential, and the capability of bone marrow cells to form in vitro spontaneous colonies as in CML.
Sunfl ower, a major edible oil crop producing a high-quality and healthful oil for human consumption and also recycled for use as feedstock to produce biodiesel fuel, is recently being cultivated in rotation with rice in the paddy fi eld. The oil of cultivars with a high oleic acid content has higher oxidation stability and better nutritional properties than the standard cultivars, which have a high linoleic acid content. In this study, we evaluated the effects of excess water on plant growth, seed yield, and oil quality. Seed yield, the major yield components, the oleic acid content and the total oil content were negatively affected by a shallow water table. In particular, waterlogging at the establishment stage decreased the growth and seed yield severely. In addition, waterlogging during the fl owering and maturation stages tended to decrease the oleic acid content and to increase the linoleic acid content. These results will be useful for improving management practices to increase the seed yield and improve the oil quality of sunfl ower in rotation with upland paddy rice.
A wide diversity of domesticated chicken breeds exist due to artificial selection on the basis of human interests. Miniature variants (bantams) are eminently illustrative of the large changes from ancestral junglefowls. In this report, the genetic characterization of seven Japanese miniature chicken breeds and varieties, together with institute-kept Red Junglefowl, was conducted by means of typing 40 microsatellites located on 21 autosomes. We drew focus to genetic differentiation between the miniature chicken breeds and Red Junglefowl in particular. A total of 305 alleles were identified: 27 of these alleles (8.9%) were unique to the Red Junglefowl with high frequencies (>20%). Significantly high genetic differences (F(ST)) were obtained between Red Junglefowl and all other breeds with a range of 0.3901-0.5128. Individual clustering (constructed from combinations of the proportion of shared alleles and the neighbour-joining method) indicated high genetic divergence among breeds including Red Junglefowl. There were also individual assignments on the basis of the Bayesian and distance-based approaches. The microsatellite differences in the miniature chicken breeds compared to the presumed wild ancestor reflected the phenotypic diversity among them, indicating that each of these miniature chicken breeds is a unique gene pool.
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