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Immunophenotypic and immunogenotypic characteristics of TCRgammadelta+ T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Leukemia 1999 Februrary
Thirty T cell receptor (TCR)gammadelta+ T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALL) were analyzed for their immunophenotype, as well as for the rearrangements and junctional regions of the TCRG and TCRD genes. In 15 cases membrane expression of TCRgammadelta proteins could be studied extensively by flow cytometry with a new Vgamma/Vdelta antibody panel. Virtually all TCRgammadelta+ T-ALLs expressed TdT, CD2, CD3, CD5, CD6, and CD7, but they were heterogeneous in their CD1/CD4/CD8 immunophenotype. The majority expressed either CD4+/CD8- or CD4+/CD8+, whereas only 7/30 TCRgammadelta+ T-ALLs lacked both antigens. Despite heterogeneity in the rearranged TCRG and TCRD genes, we found preferential protein expression of VgammaI (21/30), Jgamma2.3 (19/30) and Cgamma2 (21/30) gene products in the TCRgammadelta+ T-ALL. Expressed TCRD genes were largely limited to Vdelta1-Jdelta1, except for six patients who expressed non-Vdelta1 TCRdelta chains (Vdelta2-Jdelta1, Vdelta2-Jdelta3, Vdelta3-Jdelta1, Vdelta6-Jdelta2, and two Valpha-Jdelta1). In spite of the relatively limited combinatorial repertoire of the TCRG and TCRD genes, the junctional region diversity of the expressed genes was extensive. The Vgamma/Vdelta antibody panel confirmed the predominant, but not exclusive, expression of VgammaI and Vdelta1 proteins. Importantly, not a single T-ALL expressed the common peripheral blood Vgamma9+/Vdelta2+ phenotype. These immunogenotypic and immunophenotypic characteristics represent excellent targets for flow cytometric and PCR-based detection of 'minimal residual disease' in all TCRgammadelta+ T-ALL. Comparison of non-Vdelta1+ TCRgammadelta T-ALLs with the more common Vdelta1+ type showed a trend towards a more mature immunogenotype in the former. Firstly, more complete TCRD rearrangements were identified on the non-expressed allele in the non-Vdelta1+ group (83% vs 43%); secondly, a higher frequency of 'end-stage' Jgamma2.3 gene rearrangements was found in non-Vdelta1 cases on both TCRG alleles (83% vs 66%); thirdly, a higher frequency of complete TCRB rearrangements was found in non-Vdelta1 cases (79% vs 50%).

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