Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla 10595, USA.
Abstract
The identity of the maturation inducer capable of mediating the differentiation of human myeloid leukemic HL-60 calls to terminal monocytic cells was investigated. One of such inducers from T cells was purified as a 54.3-kD peptide. The amino acid sequence of a tryptic peptide and the enzyme cleavage sites revealed 100% homology to neuroleukin or phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI). Neuroleukin mediates differentiation of neurons and is homologous to PGI, which catalyzes the interconversion of glucose-6-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate. The 54.3-kD inducer was shown to have PGI enzymatic activity. Separately purified PGI by substrate-elution exhibited identical specificity as the maturation inducer for HL-60 cell differentiation. They mediated a reduction of proliferating S and G2M cells, and the mature monocytic calls acquired complement receptors, phagocytic capacity, and adherence morphology. The magnitude of differentiation was dosage dependent on the inducer, with a bell-shaped curve. At the excess dose range cells did not undergo differentiation and remained in a proliferating cycle. Abnormally elevated PGI enzyme activities were detected in the plasma of acute myelogenous leukemia patients. Whether they represent an excess of the differentiation regulator in patients and are important in leukemogenesis remain to be investigated.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
180 articles.
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