Abstract
A hybridoma-derived monoclonal antibody, produced by immunization with the Burkitt's tumor-derived B-lymphoblastoid cell line, B35M, was previously shown to detect a 68,000 dalton surface membrane protein, BL2, on the surface of peripheral blood B cells, which is absent from thymocytes, T cells, and granulocytes. In this study, we investigated the expression and distribution of BL2 on benign and malignant human lymphoid cells. Indirect immunofluorescent assay with this monoclonal antibody demonstrated that BL2 is expressed by cells within the fetal liver and by a variable proportion of lymph node, tonsil, and spleen B cells, but not by T cells. The neoplastic cells isolated from 18 T-cell malignancies were BL2- . BL2 was was heterogeneously expressed by a variable proportion of the malignant cells in 29/32 cases of B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia and 33/38 cases of B-cell lymphomas, but appeared to be lost in the terminal stages of B-cell differentiation, as myeloma plasma cells were BL2- . BL2 expression was not limited to B cells of a particular surface immunoglobulin isotype. Immunofluorescent staining for BL2 in cryostat tissue sections demonstrated that the majority, but not all, germinal center and interfollicular Ia+ (non-T) cells are BL2+. These findings suggest that BL2 is a B-cell lineage-specific differentiation marker that may be useful in the study of B-cell ontogeny and in defining subgroups of the B-cell malignancies.
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