Two acute monocytic leukemia (AML-M5a) cell lines (MOLM-13 and MOLM-14) with interclonal phenotypic heterogeneity showing MLL-AF9 fusion resulting from an …

Y Matsuo, RAF MacLeod, CC Uphoff, HG Drexler… - Leukemia, 1997 - nature.com
Y Matsuo, RAF MacLeod, CC Uphoff, HG Drexler, C Nishizaki, Y Katayama, G Kimura…
Leukemia, 1997nature.com
We describe two new human leukemia cell lines, MOLM-13 and MOLM-14, established from
the peripheral blood of a patient at relapse of acute monocytic leukemia, FAB M5a, which
had evolved from myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Both cell lines express monocyte-
specific esterase (MSE) and MLL-AF9 fusion mRNA. Gene fusion is associated with a
minute chromosomal insertion, ins (11; 9)(q23; p22p23). MOLM-13 and MOLM-14 are the
first cell lines with, and represent the third reported case of, MLL gene rearrangement arising …
Abstract
We describe two new human leukemia cell lines, MOLM-13 and MOLM-14, established from the peripheral blood of a patient at relapse of acute monocytic leukemia, FAB M5a, which had evolved from myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Both cell lines express monocyte-specific esterase (MSE) and MLL-AF9 fusion mRNA. Gene fusion is associated with a minute chromosomal insertion, ins (11; 9)(q23; p22p23). MOLM-13 and MOLM-14 are the first cell lines with, and represent the third reported case of, MLL gene rearrangement arising via chromosomal insertion. Both cell lines carry trisomy 8 which was also present during the MDS phase, as well as the most frequent trisomies associated with t (9; 11), ie,+ 6,+ 13,+ 19 variously present in different subclones. Despite having these features in common, differences in antigen expression were noted between the two cell lines: that of MOLM-13 being CD34+, CD13−, CD14−, CD15+, CD33+; whereas MOLM-14 was CD4+, CD13+, CD14+, CD15+, CD33+. Differentiation to macrophage-like morphology could be induced in both cell lines after stimulation with INF-γ alone, or in combination with TNF-α, which treatment also induced or upregulated, expression of certain myelomonocyte-associated antigens, including CD13, CD14, CD15, CD64, CD65 and CD87. Together, these data confirm that both cell lines are likely to be novel in vitro models for studying monocytic differentiation and leukemogenesis.
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