Functional Consequences of APO-1/Fas (CD95) Antigen Expression by Normal and Neoplastic Hematopoietic Cells
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Leukemia & Lymphoma
- Vol. 17 (1-2) , 51-61
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10428199509051703
Abstract
Murine monoclonal antibody (mAb) 7C11 binds to the same cell surface epitope as anti-APO-1 and anti-Fas and reacts specifically with cells transfected with a cDNA encoding the human Fas antigen. Furthermore, incubation with 7C11 causes death of hematopoietic cell lines that express APO-1/Fas but not APO-1/Fas-negative cell lines. 7C11 therefore recognizes the human APO- 1/Fas (CD95) antigen, a 40 to 50 kDa cell surface glycoprotein that can trigger apoptosis or programmed cell death. Expression of APO- 1/Fas antigen by normal and neoplastic hematopoietic cells was determined by flow cytometry using 7C11. APO-1/Fas is expressed by 30 to 40% of resting peripheral blood T cells, B cells, and monocytes and by -5% of resting NK cells and thymocytes. It was not detected on granulocytes, erythrocytes, or platelets. Approximately 80 to 90% of activated T cells, B cells, and thymocytes express APO-1/Fas, as do the majority of activated NK cells. Perturbation of APO-1/Fas by 7C11 does not affect the viability of resting lymphocytes or monocytes. In contrast, activated T cells and NK cells undergo apoptosis within 3 hours of exposure to 7C11. Other mAb that stimulate T cells or NK cells do not cause rapid induction of programmed cell death. APO-1/Fas antigen is expressed by many cell lines of lymphoid and myeloid lineage. However, this antigen was detected on neoplastic cells from only one of 69 patients with acute myeloid leukemia, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, or multiple myeloma. Only 3 out of 25 tumor samples from patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma were found to express APO-1/Fas. All three of these lymphomas harbored the bcl-2-Ig fusion gene associated with the chromosomal translocation t (14; 18). Conversely, only 27% of lymphomas that possessed the bcl-2-Ig gene were found to express the APO-1/Fas antigen. Like normal activated lymphocytes, leukemia and lymphoma cells that expressed APO-1/Fas antigen were found to undergo apoptosis in vitro after incubation with 7C11. The APO-1/Fas antigen appears to regulate the growth of normal hematopoietic cells, and the marked upregulation of this antigen on activated normal lymphocytes contrasts sharply with the absence of APO- 1/Fas on neoplastic cells of hematopoietic lineage. Defects in the apoptotic signal delivered through this antigen might contribute to the pathogenesis of hematopoietic neoplasms. Thus, the gene encoding APO- 1/Fas can be considered a novel type of tumor suppressor gene, just as bcl-2 can be considered a cellular proto-oncogene.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interleukins 9, 10, 11 and 12 and kit ligand: A brief overviewResearch in Immunology, 1992
- Cytokine receptors: structure and signal transductionClinical and Experimental Immunology, 1992
- Bcl-2 initiates a new category of oncogenes: regulators of cell deathBlood, 1992
- Induction of apoptosis by wild-type p53 in a human colon tumor-derived cell line.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- A new superfamily of cell surface proteins related to the nerve growth factor receptorImmunology Today, 1991
- Wild-type p53 induces apoptosis of myeloid leukaemic cells that is inhibited by interleukin-6Nature, 1991
- Hematopoietic Growth FactorsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- The interleukins 1The FASEB Journal, 1989
- Monoclonal Antibody-Mediated Tumor Regression by Induction of ApoptosisScience, 1989
- The Human Hematopoietic Colony-Stimulating FactorsScience, 1987