Abstract
The presence of the common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA) on leukemic cells from the great majority of patients with non-T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast crisis suggests that CALLA could be differentiation antigen expressed by normal lymphoid and myeloid stem cells. Treatment with a murine monoclonal anti-CALLA antibody and complement lysed CALLA-positive leukemic cells quantitatively, whereas similar treatment of nucleated cells from peripheral blood and bone marrow failed to affect the expression, in semisolid culture, of CFU-G/E, BFU-E, CFU-E, or CFU-C. These data suggest that CALLA is not a normal differentiation antigen of the myeloid bipotent cell or its committed progenitors.