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SUMMARY:
Lymphomas involving the nasal and nasopharyngeal region mainly include
CD56-positive natural killer (NK)/T-cell lymphomas, CD56-negative peripheral
T-cell lymphomas (PTL), and B-cell lymphomas. Among these, the CD56-positive
lymphoma, presumably of an NK/T-cell nature, is frequently seen in Asian,
Mexican, and South American patients. NK cells are proposed to be closer
developmentally to T cells than to other lymphoid cells, because bipotential
common progenitor cells of NK/T-cell lineage have been isolated. In this
study, we collected 47 cases of nasal lymphoma and investigated the phenotypic
difference between NK/T-cell lymphoma and PTL by examining the pattern
of the developmentally differentially expressed molecules cdk6 (cyclin-dependent
kinase 6), CD44, CD117, and by examining the rearrangement of the T-cell
receptor gene (TcR-GR). cdk6, an essential regulator of the cell
cycle in G1 progression, was over-expressed in a subset of
cortical thymocytes, but absent in mature thymocytes. In contrast, CD44,
a glycosylated adhesion molecule, was absent in cortical thymocytes, but
present in mature thymocytes and peripheral activated T cells. We found
both over-expression of nuclear cdk6 (n-cdk6) and frequent absence of
CD44 in nasal CD56-positive NK/T-cell lymphomas, in contrast to most nasal
CD56-negative PTL, which were CD44-immunoreactive with weak or no expression
of n-cdk6. Almost all tested cases of NK/T-cell lymphoma displayed a germ-line
configuration of TcR, without evidence of gene rearrangement. Thus,
there seems to be a useful distinction between the classical NK/T type
of nasal lymphoma (CD56+/n-cdk6+/CD44-/TcR-GR-)
and PTL (CD56-n-cdk6-/CD44+/TcR-GR+)
involving the nasal region. The presence of Epstein-Barr virus does not
seem to be a good marker for distinguishing between NK/T lymphoma and
PTL involving the nasal region.
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