Abstract

The nature of null-cell acute lymphatic leukemia (ALL) was investigated with the aid of a thymic humoral factor (THF), bone marrow cells, and a local xenogeneic graft-versus-host reaction (GVHR). Lymphocytes obtained from the blood and bone marrow of six children with T-cell ALL, five with null-cell ALL, one with perinatal B-cell ALL, one with acute myelocytic leukemia, and one with erythroleukemia were tested for membrane surface markers (E, EAC, and SM Ig); functional activity of T cells was tested by a local GVHR. All of the specimens obtained at the initial presentation showed a lack of functional activity of the lymphocytes. Incubation of null cell and acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) bone marrow with THF led to the acquisition of the characteristics of functional, immunocompetent T cells. No such effect was seen when the bone marrow of T-cell ALL and peripheral blood lymphocytes of B-cell perinatal ALL were incubated with THF. This study demonstrates that the null cell in ALL bone marrow can be differentiated into a T cell whereas the stem cell in AML bone marrow constitutes a pluripotential undifferentiated cell which also can mature into a T cell.

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