Cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, which are mediated by cell adhesion molecules, play a fundamental role during many cellular processes including growth, differentiation, cell migration and cancer metastasis. One molecule playing a major role in these processes is the CD44 surface receptor, which is expressed in a wide range of cells including many cells of the hemopoietic system, where it mediates the interaction with its major ligand, hyaluronate. However, little is known about CD44 and hyaluronate in bone marrow and this was investigated immunohistochemically in trephine biopsies and in cultivated human bone marrow stromal cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent data suggest that angiogenesis in the bone marrow (BM) is augmented and associated with growth of neoplastic cells in various hematological malignancies. Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a neoplasm affecting multilineage and mast cell (MC)-committed hemopoietic progenitors. In the present study, we have assessed the BM microvessel density (MVD) by CD34 immunohistochemistry in 21 patients with SM, 5 with cutaneous mastocytosis (no BM infiltrates), and 5 control cases (normal BM).
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