1. Establishment of a novel anaplastic large-cell lymphoma-cell line (COST) from a ‘small-cell variant’ of ALCL
- Author
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Laurence Lamant, Randy D. Gascoyne, Michèle Allouche, T. Al Saati, Claire Villalva, J Ragab, Nicole Dastugue, Marie-Michèle Duplantier, Estelle Espinos, Pierre Brousset, Alain Robert, and Georges Delsol
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mice, SCID ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biology ,Gene Rearrangement, T-Lymphocyte ,Translocation, Genetic ,Immunophenotyping ,Mice ,Antigens, CD ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Chromosome Aberrations ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Large cell ,Large-cell lymphoma ,Hematology ,Gene rearrangement ,medicine.disease ,Lymphoma ,Oncology ,Child, Preschool ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 ,Cytogenetic Analysis ,Cancer research ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 ,Lymphoma, Large-Cell, Anaplastic ,Female ,CD5 ,CD8 - Abstract
Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a distinct biological and cytogenetic entity with a broad spectrum of morphological features (common type, small-cell variant and lymphohistiocytic variant). Few cell lines of ALCL are available and they all originate from primary tumors demonstrating the common type morphology (ie large-sized lymphoma cells). We established a new ALCL cell line (COST) from the peripheral blood of a patient with a small-cell variant of ALCL, at diagnosis. Cells growing in vitro and in SCID mice consisted of two populations, that is, small- and large-sized cells as seen in the patient's tumor. Both large and small malignant cells were positive for CD43/MT1 T-cell associated antigen, perforin, granzyme B and TIA-1, but negative for CD2, CD3, CD5, CD7, CD4 and CD8 antigens. Standard cytogenetic studies as well as multiplex FISH confirmed the presence of the canonical t(2;5)(p23;q35) translocation, but also revealed additional numerical and structural abnormalities. The COST cell line is the first ALCL small-cell variant cell line, and thus provides a potentially useful tool for further functional and molecular studies that should improve our understanding of the small-cell variant of ALCL, which is more frequently complicated by a leukemic phase.
- Published
- 2004
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