Abstract
A significant number of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma have peripheral blood involvement during the course of their disease. Because the expression of receptor for the lectin peanut agglutinin PNA by normal lymphocytes is associated with noncirculating (stationary phase) cells, we studied the relationship between PNA binding by lymphoma cells and the presence of clonal B cells in the blood of 38 patients with B-cell lymphoma. The binding of PNA by cells in tissues was determined by the immunoperoxidase method and by two-color flow cytometry. Circulating lymphoma cells (clonal B cells) were identified by a sensitive flow-cytometric technique (kappa-lambda analysis) and were also studied for PNA binding in some cases. In all, 16 of 38 (42%) of lymphomas were PNA+, including a spectrum of histologic types. Circulating lymphoma cells were demonstrated in 17 of 22 PNA-lymphomas, whereas only 3 of 16 of PNA+ lymphomas had such circulating cells. Thus, there is a significant association between PNA binding and peripheral blood involvement by lymphoma (P less than .005 by chi- square analysis). In 12 cases, the circulating and tissue lymphoma cells had similar expression of PNA receptor (2 PNA+ and 10 PNA- cases), indicating that modulation of the PNA binding sites did not occur. In three patients who presented with lymphosarcoma cell leukemia, the circulating malignant cells were PNA-. These findings suggest that for both normal and malignant lymphocytes the absence of binding sites for PNA is associated with the capacity of these cells to circulate freely.