6 research outputs found

    Herpes-Virus Infection in Patients with Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis: A Case-Controlled Sero-Epidemiological Study, and In Situ Analysis

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    BACKGROUND: Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare disease that affects mainly young children, and which features granulomas containing Langerhans-type dendritic cells. The role of several human herpesviruses (HHV) in the pathogenesis of LCH was suggested by numerous reports but remains debated. Epstein-barr virus (EBV, HHV-4), & Cytomegalovirus (CMV, HHV-5) can infect Langerhans cells, and EBV, CMV and HHV-6 have been proposed to be associated with LCH based on the detection of these viruses in clinical samples. METHODOLOGY: We have investigated the prevalence of EBV, CMV and HHV-6 infection, the characters of antibody response and the plasma viral load in a cohort of 83 patients and 236 age-matched controls, and the presence and cellular localization of the viruses in LCH tissue samples from 19 patients. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The results show that prevalence, serological titers, and viral load for EBV, CMV and HHV-6 did not differ between patients and controls. EBV was found by PCR in tumoral sample from 3/19 patients, however, EBV small RNAs EBERs -when positive-, were detected by in situ double staining in bystander B CD20+ CD79a+ lymphocytes and not in CD1a+ LC. HHV-6 genome was detected in the biopsies of 5/19 patients with low copy number and viral Ag could not be detected in biopsies. CMV was not detected by PCR in this series. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Therefore, our findings do not support the hypothesis of a role of EBV, CMV, or HHV-6 in the pathogenesis of LCH, and indicate that the frequent detection of Epstein-barr virus (EBV) in Langerhans cell histiocytosis is accounted for by the infection of bystander B lymphocytes in LCH granuloma. The latter observation can be attributed to the immunosuppressive micro environment found in LCH granuloma

    Immunophenotypic and ultrastructural validation of a new human glioblastoma cell line

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    1. A human glioma cell line, NG97, was established by Grippo et al. in 2001 from tissue obtained from a grade III astrocytoma (WHO, 2000). In this first study, the cell line grew as two morphologically distinct subpopulations: dendritic/spindle cells and small round cells. The injection of NG97 cells into nude mice induced an aggressive tumor characterized by: severe cytological atypia, vascular proliferation and pseudopalisading necrosis (glioblastoma multiforme features). 2. The purpose of the present study was to characterize the immunophenotype and ultrastructural aspects of this cell line, using the parental tumor, cultured cells and the xenotransplant, in order to assess its glial nature and possible divergent differentiation. 3. NG97 cells and xenotransplant expressed the main neuroglial markers (GFAP, S-100 protein, NSE and Leu-7) and showed no aberrant expression of other histogenetic markers. GFAP was similarly expressed in the parental tumor and in the cells in culture, but decreased in the xenotransplant. NSE expression was reduced in NG97 cells, but substantially recovered in the xenotransplant. This variability in expression of GFAP and NSE was interpreted as either a phenomenon of dedifferentiation or to microenvironmental selection of specific subclones. S-100 was equally expressed in the three contexts. The xenotransplant's ultrastructural features were those of a highly undifferentiated tumor. No significant immunophenotypic or ultrastructural differences between the two morphologically distinct populations were found. 4. Thus, our data demonstrate that NG97 cells constitute a pure glial-committed cell line, which may prove useful as a malignant glioma model in studies addressing pathophysiological, diagnostic and therapeutic issues.25592994
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