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Original Article

CDK1 and Cyclin A Expression is Linked to Cell Proliferation and Associated with Prognosis in Non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas

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Pages 147-157 | Received 18 Jan 1999, Published online: 01 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Cellular proliferation is regulated by several kinasic complexes associating cyclins and their catalytic subunits cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). In order to gain insight into the mechanisms underlying proliferation in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), we examined the expression of certain cell cycle regulatory proteins normally expressed in lymphoid cells, cyclins A, B, D3 and E and cdkl, 2, 4, and 6. In 70 patients presenting a previously untreated lymphoma, cyclins and CDKs were studied by Western blotting and quantified by densitomerry. Flow cytometry study of DNA content was canied out for all patients in order to study cell proliferation and level of ploidy. The results were analysed according to the histological types, the immunological phenotypes of the lymphomas and the outcome of the patients.

Cdk1 and cyclin A were correlated with the percentage of cells in S and S+G2/M phases, and significantly different according to the grade of malignancy, with the lowest expression in low-, and the highest in high-grade NHL according to the Working Formulation. In B-NHLs, cdkl, cyclin A, as well as cdk2, cyclin D3 and E expression was higher in the aneuploid than in the euploid group. Our results point to some particularities of cell cycle regulation in two lymphoma sub-types: I) a low expression of cyclin D3 and cdk6 in mantle cell lymphomas and 2) a discrepancy between the high proliferative activity and the level of protein expression in Burkitt's lymphomas. CDKl and cyclin A showed a significant prognostic value for achievement of complete remission (Cdk 1) and for both disease free (cyclin A) and overall survival (cyclin A and cdkl): low protein level was associated with the best prognosis in B-NHLs.

Our results show that differential cell cycle regulating protein expression may be associated with different biological and clinical behaviour of NHLs and confirm the usefulness of the study of cell cycle regulation as a tool for understanding lymphoid malignancies.

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