Söderberg O
Institute for Molecular Pathology and Immunology, University of Porto, Portugal.
Med Oncol. 1998 Jul;15(2):73-8. doi: 10.1007/BF02989583.
Although chronic lymphocytic leukaemia of B cell type (B-CLL) is the most common form of leukaemia in the Western world, several questions about the biology of B-CLL remain to be clarified. To obtain a conceptual model for B-CLL, defined as a relentless accumulation of resting B-CLL cells, it is particularly relevant to ask which cell type is the normal counterpart of B-CLL; what is the site of proliferation; which signals are involved in the recruitment and induction of proliferation and which signals contribute to the survival of the B-CLL cells? The significance of the studies on B-CLL cells in vitro for the interpretation of the in vivo situation may be questioned since they oversimplify the multiple and complex cellular interactions that occur in vivo. However, the in vitro studies have been instrumental in elucidating signals that may regulate growth, differentiation and survival of B-CLL cells. This knowledge, herein reviewed, can be used to put forward a hypothesis on B-CLL cell regulation in vivo.
尽管B细胞型慢性淋巴细胞白血病(B-CLL)是西方世界最常见的白血病形式,但关于B-CLL生物学的几个问题仍有待阐明。为了获得一个关于B-CLL的概念模型,其被定义为静止B-CLL细胞的持续积累,特别有必要询问哪种细胞类型是B-CLL的正常对应物;增殖发生的部位在哪里;哪些信号参与了增殖的募集和诱导,以及哪些信号有助于B-CLL细胞的存活?对B-CLL细胞进行的体外研究对于体内情况解释的意义可能受到质疑,因为这些研究过度简化了体内发生的多种复杂细胞相互作用。然而,体外研究有助于阐明可能调节B-CLL细胞生长、分化和存活的信号。本文所综述的这些知识可用于提出关于体内B-CLL细胞调节的假说。