Publication | Closed Access
Peanut agglutinin: a marker for normal and leukaemic cells of the monocyte lineage.
29
Citations
20
References
1982
Year
ImmunohematologyLymphocyte DevelopmentImmunologyBlood CellPathologyImmunophenotypingCellular PhysiologyHematological MalignancyLeukaemic CellsLaboratory HematologyAnll ClassificationBioanalysisHematologyMolecular DiagnosticsCell SorterPeanut AgglutininHealth SciencesMonocyte LineageGranulocyteCell BiologyMyelopoiesisMalignant Blood DisorderMedicineCell Development
The potential of peanut agglutinin (PNA) as a monocyte lineage marker and a diagnostic tool was investigated. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (MNC) from normal adults, and 20 patients with acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia (ANLL), as well as five human cell lines were analysed for fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-PNA binding using the fluorescence activated cell sorter (FACS). Monocytes and monoblasts, which were positive for non-specific esterase activity, bound FITC-PNA. In addition, FITC-PNA was bound by a population of cells not defined by cytochemical criteria which were probably precursors to monoblasts. The classical myeloid blast cell did not bind FITC-PNA. ANLL classification is discussed in the light of these results. FITC-PNA clearly binds to cells of the monocyte lineage, and has potential as an adjunct to current cytochemical and morphological criteria in classification.
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