78 research outputs found
Activin enhances skin tumourigenesis and malignant progression by inducing a pro-tumourigenic immune cell response
Activin is an important orchestrator of wound repair, but its potential role in skin carcinogenesis has not been addressed. Here we show using different types of genetically modified mice that enhanced levels of activin in the skin promote skin tumour formation and their malignant progression through induction of a pro-tumourigenic microenvironment. This includes accumulation of tumour-promoting Langerhans cells and regulatory T cells in the epidermis. Furthermore, activin inhibits proliferation of tumour-suppressive epidermal γδ T cells, resulting in their progressive loss during tumour promotion. An increase in activin expression was also found in human cutaneous basal and squamous cell carcinomas when compared with control tissue. These findings highlight the parallels between wound healing and cancer, and suggest inhibition of activin action as a promising strategy for the treatment of cancers overexpressing this factor
The subclonal complexity of STIL-TAL1+ T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
Single-cell genetics were used to interrogate clonal complexity and the sequence of mutational events in STIL-TAL1+ T-ALL. Single-cell multicolour FISH was used to demonstrate that the earliest detectable leukaemia subclone contained the STIL-TAL1 fusion and copy number loss of 9p21.3 (CDKN2A/CDKN2B locus), with other copy number alterations including loss of PTEN occurring as secondary subclonal events. In three cases, multiplex qPCR and phylogenetic analysis were used to produce branching evolutionary trees recapitulating the snapshot history of T-ALL evolution in this leukaemia subtype, which confirmed that mutations in key T-ALL drivers, including NOTCH1 and PTEN, were subclonal and reiterative in distinct subclones. Xenografting confirmed that self-renewing or propagating cells were genetically diverse. These data suggest that the STIL-TAL1 fusion is a likely founder or truncal event. Therapies targeting the TAL1 auto-regulatory complex are worthy of further investigation in T-ALL
Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Patients in Prolonged Remission following Interferon-alpha Monotherapy Have Distinct Cytokine and Oligoclonal Lymphocyte Profile
Peer reviewe
Immunophenotyping and Gene Rearrangement Analysis in Dogs with Lymphoproliferative Disorders Characterized by Small-Cell Lymphocytosis
T-cell receptor Vð-J alpha rearrangements in human thymocytes: the role of Vð-J alpha rearrangements in T-cell receptor-ð gene deletion
Treatment response and outcome of children with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia expressing the gamma-delta T-cell receptor
Characterization of the Immune Response of Human Cord-Blood Derived γδ T Cells to Stimulation with Aminobisphosphonate Compounds
Antigen specificity of semi‐invariant CD1d‐restricted T cell receptors: The best of both worlds?
Preferential rearrangements of the T cell receptor-delta-deleting elements in human T cells.
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