Growth and spread of human malignant T lymphoblasts in immunosuppressed nude mice: A model for meningeal leukemia

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Abstract

Previous work has shown that nude (nu/nu) mice additionally immunosuppressed by splenectomy, sublethal irradiation, and treatment with antiasialo GM1 antiserum (SIA-nu/nu mice) have no detectable natural killer activity and allow the growth of human malignant lymphoblasts. We show here that all SIA-nu/nu mice engrafted intravenously with 5 × 106 malignant lymphoblasts originally derived from a child with a T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (PF382) and from a boy with a T-cell lymphoma (ST-4) develop lethal meningeal leukemia and die within 35 days. Histologic examination of moribund SIA-nu/nu mice showed that vertebral and skull bone marrow was always replaced by proliferating human T lymphoblasts. From the spinal canal, lymphoblasts spread to the meninges, causing hind leg paralysis. Leaving the skull, they permeated the meninges and then invaded the nervous parenchyma. This efficient and reproducible experimental model may be suitable for experimental studies on the pathogenesis of meningeal leukemia. © 1992 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Cavallo, F., Forni, M., Riccardi, C., Soleti, A., Di Pierro, F., & Forni, G. (1992). Growth and spread of human malignant T lymphoblasts in immunosuppressed nude mice: A model for meningeal leukemia. Blood, 80(5), 1279–1283. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v80.5.1279.bloodjournal8051279

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