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Polycythemia Vera: Stem-Cell and Probable Clonal Origin of the Disease
648
Citations
11
References
1976
Year
Polycythemia VeraBone Marrow FailureHealth SciencesMedicineHematologyMyeloid NeoplasiaPathologyGlucose-6-phosphate DehydrogenaseStem Cell ResearchBlood CellStem CellsCell BiologyMyelopoiesisBone-marrow Proliferation
Two women with polycythemia vera and heterozygosity (GdB/GdA) at the X-chromosome-linked locus for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were studied to determine the nature of the cellular origin of their polycythemia. In contrast to unaffected tissue, such as skin fibroblasts, which consisted of both B and A types, the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase of the patients' erythrocytes, granulocytes and platelets was only of Type A. These results provide direct evidence for the stem-cell nature of polycythemia vera and strongly imply a clonal origin for this disease. The fact that no descendants of the presumed normal stem cells were found in circulation suggests that bone-marrow proliferation in this disorder is influenced by local (intramarrow) regulatory factors.
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