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Br J Haematol. 1999 Jun;105(3):690-5.
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CD99 (MIC2) expression in
paediatric B-lineage leukaemia/lymphoma
reflects maturation-associated patterns of
normal B-lymphopoiesis.
Dworzak MN, Fritsch G,
Fleischer C, Printz D,
Fröschl G, Buchinger P,
Mann G, Gadner H.
Children's Cancer
Research Institute, St Anna Kinderspital,
Vienna, Austria. dworzak@ccri.univie.ac.at
We have recently shown
that CD99 (MIC2) is differentially expressed
during normal early B-cell development in
the bone marrow (BM). Since immature B-cell
precursors (BCP) are assumed to correspond
to some extent to acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia (ALL) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(NHL) cells with respect to patterns of
phenotypic differentiation, we wondered
whether the particular maturation-associated
expression patterns of CD99 in the normal
BCP stages were conserved also in malignant
cells. Therefore we compared malignant and
physiological B cells from paediatric
ALL/NHL and normal BM samples with respect
to CD99 expression using selective gating
and semi-quantitative flow cytometry.
Common-ALLs (n = 45) were similar to their
corresponding, very immature BCPs (stage 1)
in expressing very high levels of CD99. Most
pre-B ALLs (n = 16) were also CD99hi and
thus differed from the patterns found in
normal cytoplasmic mu-chain+ (cmu+) pre-B
cells (stage 2, CD99lo). In particular, we
found that those pre-B-ALL cases which were
CD34+ also showed higher CD99 expression
than the CD34- cases. This prompted us to
investigate the levels of CD99 in those rare
normal BCPs which also coexpress CD34 and
cmu; these cells, which are transitory from
stage 1 to stage 2, were found also CD99hi,
thus precisely reflecting the patterns of
CD34+ pre-B ALLs. The blasts of Burkitt-type
B-cell ALL/NHL samples (n = 13) expressed
considerably less CD99, similarly to the
more differentiated BCP stages 2 (cmu+) and
3 (surface mu-chain+). In summary, we found
that paediatric B-lineage malignancies
display remarkable synchrony regarding the
levels of CD99 expression compared to their
putative normal counterparts.
PMID: 10354133 [PubMed -
indexed for MEDLINE]