INVESTIGADORES
RABINOVICH Gabriel Adrian
artículos
Título:
NURSE-LIKE CELLS CONTROL THE ACTIVITY OF CHRONIC LYMPHOCYTIC LEUKEMIA B CELLS VIA GALECTIN-1
Autor/es:
CROCI DO; MORANDE PE; DERGAN-DYLON S; BORGE M; TOSCANO MA; BEZARES RF; AVALOS JS; NARBAITZ M; GAMBERALE R; RABINOVICH GA*; GIORDANO M* (COMPAREN ÚLTIMA AUTORÍA)
Revista:
LEUKEMIA
Editorial:
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2013 vol. 27 p. 1413 - 1416
ISSN:
0887-6924
Resumen:
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells are preferentially activated in so-called proliferation centers frequently found in lymph nodes and bone marrow from CLL patients.1 In these ?privileged? sites leukemic cells establish close contact with a variety of cell types that provide long-term support for their survival and progression. In addition, CLL cells favor the establishment of immunosuppressive microenvironments by altering the cytokine milieu.2 Galectin 1 (Gal1), an endogenous b-galactoside-binding lectin found at sites of inflammation and tumor growth, displays pro-survival activity on malignant cells as demonstrated for CD45RA() primary myeloma cells.3 Moreover,it controls tumor cell proliferation and invasiveness and has key roles in tumor-immune escape by dampening T-cell-mediated immunity.4 In Hodgkin lymphoma, Gal1 is overexpressed in Reed? Sternberg cells, which is a predictive biomarker of disease progression and is responsible for creating the Th2/regulatory T-cell-skewed microenvironment typical of this lymphoproliferative disease.5 These unique characteristics of Gal1 prompted us to investigate its potential role in CLL biology