Publications by authors named "J Apperly"

Patients with haematological malignancies have a high risk of severe infection and death from SARS-CoV-2. In this prospective observational study, we investigated the impact of cancer type, disease activity, and treatment in 877 unvaccinated UK patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection and active haematological cancer. The primary end-point was all-cause mortality.

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A cell-intrinsic timer helps control when rodent oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) exit the cell cycle and terminally differentiate when cultured in platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and thyroid hormone (TH). There is evidence that the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (CKI) p27/Kip1 (p27) is a component of this TH-regulated timer, as it increases as OPCs proliferate and is required for the timer to operate accurately. Here, we provide evidence that another CKI, p18/INK (p18), may also be a component of the timer: it increases as OPCs proliferate, and its overexpression in OPCs accelerates the timer, causing the cells to differentiate prematurely.

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During animal development many cells permanently stop dividing and terminally differentiate. For the most part, the mechanisms that control when the cells exit the cell cycle and differentiate are not known. We have been studying the mechanisms in the oligodendrocyte cell lineage.

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Out of 690 allogeneic matched sibling donor transplants for multiple myeloma reported to the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) registry, 334 were performed during the period 1983-93 (all with bone marrow) and 356 during 1994-98 [223 with bone marrow and 133 with peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs)]. The median overall survival was 10 months for patients transplanted during the earlier time period and 50 months for patients transplanted with hone marrow during the later period. The use of PBSCs was associated with earlier engraftment but no significant survival benefit compared to bone marrow transplants during the same time period.

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Most mammalian somatic cells are thought to have a limited proliferative capacity because they permanently stop dividing after a finite number of divisions in culture, a state termed replicative cell senescence. Here we show that most oligodendrocyte precursor cells purified from postnatal rat optic nerve can proliferate indefinitely in serum-free culture if prevented from differentiating; various cell cycle-inhibitory proteins increase, but the cells do not stop dividing. The cells maintain high telomerase activity and p53- and Rb-dependent cell cycle checkpoint responses, and serum or genotoxic drugs induce them to acquire a senescence-like phenotype.

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