It is widely accepted that the neoplastic B cells from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) respond poorly to common mitogens. The fungal metabolite cytochalasin B (0.5 micrograms/ml) is a weak mitogen for normal lymphocytes. However, when peripheral blood lymphocytes from 19 patients with CLL of B cell origin (B-CLL) were cultured with 0.5 micrograms cytochalasin B/ml, significant new DNA synthesis ( [14C]thymidine incorporation) occurred in 18. Stimulation indices with cytochalasin B varied widely (range = 1.9-28.2, mean +/- SD = 10.6 +/- 7.5; delta cpm range = 1,157-153,818; n = 26) but in 11 cases exceeded those seen with concanavalin A (Con A), phytohemagglutinin, or pokeweed mitogen. In all 11, the mitogenic response to cytochalasin B exceeded that to pokeweed mitogen, which is believed to be a T cell-dependent B cell mitogen. In three cases, the responses to cytochalasin B were 8.6, 3.5, and 2.3 times greater than those to Con A. As with other mitogens, the DNA synthetic response to cytochalasin B was time and dose dependent. Peak thymidine incorporation occurred at 72-88 h and declined thereafter. Significant mitogenic effects were observed with 0.1-5 micrograms cytochalasin B/ml with a peak at 0.5-2 micrograms/ml. Stimulated DNA synthesis was abolished by 1 mM hydroxyurea. Cells from two patients with B-CLL were separated by rosetting with sheep erythrocytes (E). Depletion of E-rosette-positive cells from the CLL cell population abolished the response to Con A but did not affect the response to cytochalasin B. Cytochalasin B is a potent mitogen for B-CLL cells and may be useful in cytogenetic studies of this often indolent neoplasm.
R A Larson, S Yachnin
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