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Single-cell immunofluorescence assay for terminal transferase: Human leukaemic and non-leukaemic cells
Authors:S. Okamura   F. Crane   N. Jamal   H. A. Messner     T. W. Mak
Abstract:The characteristics of a single-cell immunofluorescence assay for terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (terminal transferase, TdT) is described. The data indicate that the single-cell immunofluorescence assay is highly efficient and specific for the detection of cells containing TdT. Using this assay, we have examined 124 marrow or peripheral-blood samples from 104 patients with or without haematological malignancies. Results indicate that TdT+ cells from 6% to 100% were found in the following patients: 34/40 samples from patients with ALL at the time of diagnosis or during relapse; 2/3 patients with acute undifferentiated leukaemia; 2/3 patients with acute myelomonocytic leukaemia; 1/24 patients with acute myeloblastic leukaemia; 1/5 patients with chronic myelocytic leukaemia (CML) in blastic crisis; and 2/2 patients with diffuse lymphoblastic lymphoma. In contrast less than 1% of TdT+ cells were found in 20 marrow or peripheral-blood samples from ALL patients in complete remission; 8 patients with CML in chronic phase; 2 patients with myeloma; 1 sample from a patient with Hodgkin''s disease, peripheral-blood samples from 7 normal donors and marrow samples from 6 patients without haematological malignancies. TdT+ cells were also found in association with cells with lymphoblast morphology. The TdT+ cells in marrow were shown to be directly correlated with the percentage of morphological lymphoblasts, with a Spearman rank coefficient of 0·81, significant at a 0·001 level. In 2 longitudinal studies of 2 ALL patients with TdT+ cells at diagnosis, the percentage TdT+ cells also changed in parallel with the proportion of lymphoblasts. However, studies of 2 other patients with morphologically diagnosed ALL with < 1% TdT+ cells at diagnosis also showed < 1% TdT+ cells throughout the period studied, indicating a stable phenotype of blast cells in these patients. The single-cell immunofluorescence assay for TdT, which requires < 0·1% of the cells used in a conventional biochemical assay, is highly specific, and could provide a technically more efficient alternative for use in clinics as well as in experimental investigations of subpopulations of leukaemic and normal marrow cells.
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