scholarly journals Neoplastic Lymphoid Reticulum Cells in the Peripheral Blood: A Histochemical Study

Blood ◽  
1961 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 206-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. MITUS ◽  
I. B. MEDNICOFF ◽  
B. WITTELS ◽  
W. DAMESHEK

Abstract Abnormal appearing cells having the superficial appearance of large lymphocytes were found in some cases of generalized malignant proliferations af the reticulum cell system and were studied by cytochemical methods and by phase microscopy. They were found to be very similar in their reactions to the "fixed" or tissue reticulum cells and in many respects to monocytes, but differed markedly from the cells of the lymphocytic system with which they are often confused. The term neoplastic lymphoid reticulum cell is applied to these cells since it indicates that they are malignant in nature and fundamentally of the reticulum cell type, although in fixed and stain material they may show some of the morphologic characteristics of the lymphocytic cells.

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 45-46
Author(s):  
Christian Pohlkamp ◽  
Kapil Jhalani ◽  
Niroshan Nadarajah ◽  
Inseok Heo ◽  
William Wetton ◽  
...  

Background: Cytomorphology is the gold standard for quick assessment of peripheral blood and bone marrow samples in hematological neoplasms. It is a broadly-accepted method for orchestrating more specific diagnostics including immunophenotyping or genetics. Inter-/intra-observer-reproducibility of single cell classification is only 75 to 90%. Only a limited number of cells (100 - 500 cells/smear) is read in a time-consuming procedure. Machine learning (ML) is more reliable where human skills are limited, i.e. in handling large amounts of data or images. We here tested ML to differentiate peripheral blood leukocytes in a high throughput hematology laboratory. Aim: To establish an ML-based cell classifier capable of identifying healthy and pathologic cells in digitalized peripheral blood smear scans at an accuracy competitive with or outperforming human expert level. Methods: We selected >2,600 smears out of our unique archive of > 250,000 peripheral blood smears from hematological neoplasms. Depending on quality, we scanned up to 1,000 single cell images per smear. For image acquisition, a Metafer Scanning System (Zeiss Axio Imager.Z2 microscope, automatic slide feeder and automatic oiling device) from MetaSystems (Altlussheim, GER) was used. Areas of interest were defined by pre-scan in 10x magnification followed by high resolution scan in 40x to generate cell images for analysis. Average capture times for 300/500 cells were 3:43/4:37 min We set up a supervised ML-learning model using colour images (144x144 pixels) as input, outputting predicted probabilities of 21 predefined classes. We used ImageNet-pretrained Xception as our base model. We trained, evaluated and deployed the model using Amazon SageMaker on a subset of 82,974 images randomly selected from 514,183 cells captured and labelled for this study. 20 different cell types and one garbage class were classified. We included cell type categories referring to the critical importance of detecting rare leukemia subtypes (e.g. APL). Numbers of images from respective 21 classes ranged from 1,830 to 14,909 (median: 2,945). Minority classes were up-sampledto handle imbalances. Each picture was labelled by highly skilled technicians (median years practicing in this laboratory: 5) and two independent hematologists (median years at microscope: 20). Results: On a separate test set of 8,297 cells, our classifier was able to predict any of the five cell types occurring in the peripheral blood of healthy individuals (PMN, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils) at very high median accuracy (97.0%) Median prediction accuracy of 15 rare or pathological cell types was 91.3%. For six critical pathological cell forms (myeloblasts, atypical/bilobulated promyelocytes in APL/APLv, hairy cells, lymphoma cells,plasma cells), median accuracy was 93.4% (sensitivity 93.8%). We saw a very high "T98 accuracy" for these cell types (98.5%) which is the accuracy of cell type predictions with prediction probability >0.98 (achieved in 2231/2417 cases), implicating that critical cells predicted with probability <0.98 should be flagged for human expert validation with priority. For all 21 classes median accuracy was 91.7%. Accuracy was lower for cells representing consecutive steps of maturation, e.g. promyelo-/myelo-/metamyelocytes, reproducing inconsistencies from the human-built phenotypic classification system (s.Fig.). Conclusions: We demonstrate an automated workflow using automatic microscopic cell capturing and ML-driven cell differentiation in samples of hematologic patients. Reproducibility, accuracy, sensitivity and specificity are above 90%, for many cell types above 98%. By flagging suspicious cells for humanvalidation, this tool can support even experienced hematology professionals, especially in detecting rare cell types. Given an appropriate scanning speed, it clearly outperforms human investigators in terms of examination time and number of differentiated cells. An ML-based intelligence can make its skills accessible to hematology laboratories on site or after upload of scanned cell images, independent of time/location. A cloud-based infrastructure is available. A prospective head to head challenge between ML-based classifier and human experts comparing sensitivity and accuracy for detection of all cell classes in peripheral blood will be tested to proof suitability for routine use (NCT 4466059). Figure Disclosures Heo: AWS: Current Employment. Wetton:AWS: Current Employment. Drescher:MetaSystems: Current Employment. Hänselmann:MetaSystems: Current Employment. Lörch:MetaSystems: Current equity holder in private company.


1974 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Page ◽  
L. Schectman ◽  
W. F. Ammons ◽  
L. Dillingham

A spontaneous hematopoietic neoplasm in a cotton-top marmoset (Saguinus oedipus) was characterized by perivascular infiltration and invasion of the liver, kidneys, adrenals, spleen, lymph nodes, bone marrow, and lungs by a pleomorphic primitive reticular cell. A significant fraction of the circulating white cells was of the same cell type. The disease was diagnosed as lymphosarcoma of the reticulum-cell type with features similar to viral-induced malignancy previously described.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2316-2316
Author(s):  
Marlie H Fisher ◽  
Greg Kirkpatrick ◽  
Courtney L Jones ◽  
Brett M. Stevens ◽  
Michael Callaghan ◽  
...  

ETV6, an ETS family transcription factor, has been characterized as a master regulator of hematopoiesis and megakaryocyte development. In this work we identified a novel role for ETV6 as a key repressor of peripheral inflammation and interferon response in humans. Flow cytometry based immunophenotyping of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from 5 patients carrying a germline mutation in ETV6 (p.Pro214Leu) of various ages demonstrated normal frequencies of peripheral cell populations, including B and T cells (CD3+ and CD19+, respectively), progenitor populations, including CLP (CD19- CD3- CD34+ CD10+) and MEP (CD10- CD34+ CD38+ CD135- CD45RA-), but significantly increased circulating HSCs (CD34+ CD38- CD90+) as compared to healthy related and unrelated controls. Immunofluorescence studies in these PBMC showed cytoplasmic localization of ETV6 in all affected individuals. Furthermore, 10X genomics single cell RNA sequencing of these peripheral blood cells demonstrated profound transcriptomic dysregulation as compared to PBMCs of related and unrelated healthy controls. We initially detected a total of 204 differentially expressed transcripts in monocytes, NK cells and T and B cell populations, demonstrating a cell-type specific upregulation of inflammatory genes. We then analyzed the intersection of the significantly increased transcripts across these populations, identifying a highly specific suite of 22 genes, which depending on cell type were upregulated 4 to 400-fold. These significantly upregulated 22 transcripts in the affected individuals were highly enriched for the interferon response pathway, consisting of pro-inflammatory transcripts such as CCL4, CCL4L2, CCL3, CCL3L3, IFIT2, ISG15, MX1, IFIT3, IRF1, and NFKBIA among others. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis revealed HDAC3 as a highly predicted upstream master regulator of this group of genes. We then demonstrated by protein immunoprecipitation that both wild-type and P214L ETV6 form a complex with HDAC3, suggesting that the ETV6-HDAC3 complex is being removed from the nucleus, disrupting homeostatic transcriptional repression of interferon response genes. In summary, we have determined a new role for ETV6 as a repressive regulator of interferon response genes likely via its interaction with HDAC3. These findings have potential implications for the development of myelodysplasia and hematological malignancies observed in individuals with ETV6 germline mutations. Disclosures Callaghan: Novonordisk: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Octapharma: Consultancy; Pfizer: Research Funding; Roche: Research Funding; Biomarin, Bioverativ, Grifols, Kedrion, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech, Shire, and Spark Therapeutics: Consultancy; Alnylum: Equity Ownership; Bayer: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Takeda: Consultancy, Research Funding; Sanofi: Consultancy; Global Blood Therapeutics: Consultancy; Shire/Takeda: Speakers Bureau; Roche/Genentech: Speakers Bureau.


1984 ◽  
Vol 220 (2) ◽  
pp. 561-568
Author(s):  
G E Brown ◽  
T P Karpetsky ◽  
K Rictor ◽  
A Rahman

Native DNAase (deoxyribonuclease) activities derived from mouse peritoneal cavity and peripheral blood components were separated, detected, and characterized by electrophoresis into polyacrylamide gels containing DNA, followed by incubation of the gels, and staining of the substrate to reveal only the DNAase activities. Resident peritoneal macrophages contained 12 DNAase-II-like activities that were characteristic of that cell type, whereas lymphocytes and granulocytes each contained five DNAases. Induction of inflammation by peritoneal injection of thioglycollate resulted in changes in macrophage DNAase expression, including: increased total DNAase activity, a decrease in the number of activities from 12 to 11, increased activity of a specific subset of the enzymes, and a change in the apparent size of a specific subset of the enzymes. Electrophoretic and enzymic properties and sensitivity to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H indicated that the macrophage activities probably represented charge variants of one or two parent peptide chains.


2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 510-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Blocki ◽  
Yingting Wang ◽  
Maria Koch ◽  
Anna Goralczyk ◽  
Sebastian Beyer ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Roosheel S. Patel ◽  
Joy E. Tomlinson ◽  
Thomas J. Divers ◽  
Gerlinde R. Van de Walle ◽  
Brad R. Rosenberg

ABSTRACTTraditional laboratory model organisms represent a small fraction of the diversity of multicellular life, and findings in any given experimental model often do not translate to other species. Immunology research in non-traditional model organisms can be advantageous or even necessary (e.g. for host-pathogen interaction studies), but presents multiple challenges, many stemming from an incomplete understanding of potentially species-specific immune cell types, frequencies and phenotypes. Identifying and characterizing immune cells in such organisms is frequently limited by the availability of species-reactive immunophenotyping reagents for flow cytometry, and insufficient prior knowledge of cell type-defining markers. Here, we demonstrate the utility of single cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) to characterize immune cells for which traditional experimental tools are limited. Specifically, we used scRNA-Seq to comprehensively define the cellular diversity of equine peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from healthy horses across different breeds, ages, and sexes. We identified 30 cell type clusters partitioned into five major populations: Monocytes/Dendritic Cells, B cells, CD3+PRF1+ lymphocytes, CD3+PRF1- lymphocytes, and Basophils. Comparative analyses revealed many cell populations analogous to human PBMC, including transcriptionally heterogeneous monocytes and distinct dendritic cell subsets (cDC1, cDC2, plasmacytoid DC). Unexpectedly, we found that a majority of the equine peripheral B cell compartment is comprised of T-bet+ B cells; an immune cell subpopulation typically associated with chronic infection and inflammation in human and mouse. Taken together, our results demonstrate the potential of scRNA-Seq for cellular analyses in non-traditional model organisms, and form the basis for an immune cell atlas of horse peripheral blood.


1963 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 465-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur M. Dannenberg ◽  
Marvin S. Burstone ◽  
Paul C. Walter ◽  
June W. Kinsley

The cytochrome oxidase (CO), aminopeptidase (AMP), succinic dehydrogenase (SD), acid phosphatase, esterase, and alkaline phosphatase of rabbit mononuclear (MN) and polymorphonuclear (PMN) peritoneal exudate cells and pulmonary alveolar macrophages (AM) - air dried on Mylar strips - were characterized by histochemical techniques with respect to stability, activators, inhibitors, and pH optima. A granule count method was established for the quantitation of these enzymes. For the acid phosphatase of MN, in which the most precise results were obtained, time, pH, substrate, and inhibitor curves resembled those commonly obtained biochemically. Five of these enzymes were usually more active in AM than MN, whereas the sixth, alkaline phosphatase, was not present in either cell type. AM also tended to consume more oxygen than MN and to divide more frequently. Since the most active cells in the population would be first involved in the host's defense against microbial agents, a comparison was made of the 10 per cent of the AM and MN with the highest enzymatic activities. No differences were found in the granule counts that were not reflected by the means. However, within a given AM population, cells containing ingested dust particles seemed to have higher enzymatic activities than those without particles. MN had greater acid phosphatase and SD activities than PMN and consumed more oxygen, but the CO, AMP, and esterase activites of both types of cells were of similar magnitude. PMN showed high alkaline phosphatase activity; MN showed none. A survey of the histochemical literature indicates that a positive correlation between the enzymatic and phagocytic activities of both MN and PMN exists in vivo.


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