CD7 expression on CD34+ cells from chronic myeloid leukaemia in chronic phase

Abstract
Thirty‐seven patients with chronic phase chronic myeloid leukaemia and fourteen healthy controls have been evaluated for lineage differentiation with immunological markers on purified bone marrow CD34 positive cells by multiparameter flow cytometry. The myeloid‐associated antigen CD33 and the stem cell factor receptor (CD117, c‐kit) was expressed by 82.3% and 73.5% on CP‐CML patients and by 57% and 57.5% on healthy donors, respectively (P < 0.005). CD34+/CD19+ or CD34+/CD10+ B‐lymphoid cell population represented 9.1% and 10.7% of the CD34+ cells in CML whereas in normal controls this subpopulation was expressed by 27.9% and 30.4% of the CD34+ cells, respectively (P< 0.005). The T‐lineage associated markers (CD7 and CD2) were detected on a minor population of CD34+ BM cells of healthy controls (mean, 3.6% and 4.6%, respectively). The CD2 positive cells represented 1.5% of the CD34+ cells in CML patients. CP‐CML patients co‐expressed the CD7 antigen on a mean of 32.6% of the CD34+ BM cells. Moreover, 93% of this CD34/CD7 double positive subpopulation co‐expressed CD33 antigen in CML patients. Co‐expression of CD7 on CD34+ cells was induced to decrease significantly after short‐term in vitro culture with the differentiation‐inducing agent phorbol ester (PMA) and with a combination of cytokines (stem‐cell factor, interleukin‐3 and granulocyte colony‐stimulating factor). In conclusion, a high co‐expression of CD7 antigen is demonstrated on CD34+ cells of chronic phase‐chronic myeloid leukaemia patients. The loss of CD7 marker following incubation with PMA and cytokines suggests that this antigen is expressed transiently in early myeloid leukaemic CML haemopoiesis. Am. J. Hematol. 61:178–186, 1999.