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Expression of maturation-specific nuclear antigens in differentiating human myeloid leukemia cells.
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1985
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Hematological MalignancyChromatinCell Differentiation StudiesMixed-phenotype Acute LeukemiaMalignant Blood DisorderImmunologyHematologyPathologyMaturation-specific Nuclear AntigensLeukemia CellsAutoimmunityCell DifferentiationImmunotherapyMedicineCell BiologyCell DevelopmentTumor BiologyMyeloid Neoplasia
The expression of three myeloid-specific nuclear antigens was studied by indirect immunofluorescence with murine monoclonal antibodies in human myeloid (HL-60, ML-2, KG-1, and B-II) leukemia cells treated with chemical inducers of cell differentiation. Treatment of the promyelocytic HL-60 cells with dimethyl sulfoxide or 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 induced the cells to acquire a phenotype that resembled that of granulocytes and monocytes-macrophages, respectively. These phenotypes were characterized by changes in cell growth, cell morphology, expression of specific cell surface antigens, and activities of lysozyme and nonspecific esterase enzymes. Induction of these differentiation markers in the HL-60 cells was associated with induction of the myeloid-specific nuclear antigens. The ML-2 cells, which are arrested at the myeloblast-promyelocyte stage, were also susceptible to the induction of cell differentiation and to changes in the expression of the nuclear antigens, but the degree of susceptibility was less than in the HL-60 cells. The less-differentiated KG-1 and B-II myeloid cells were either not responsive or responded only in a limited degree to the induction of cell differentiation or to changes in the expression of the nuclear antigens. We suggest that the reactivity of cells with monoclonal antibodies to specific nuclear antigens can be used as a maturational marker in cell differentiation studies. Furthermore, nuclear antigens expressed early in cellular differentiation may provide information about changes in regulatory elements in normal and malignant cells.