Glycophorin a expression in malignant hematopoiesis

Abstract
Two hundred twenty‐nine patients with hematopoietic malignancies were tested for reactivity with a monoclonal anti‐human glycophorin A antibody. One hundred twenty‐three of these cases were classified as acute leukemias of either the myeloid, lymphoid, erythroid, or undifferentiated type. The monoclonal antibody we used (VIE‐G4) was obtained after immunization with a human thymocyte suspension. It selectively reacts with glycophorin A (GpA) and strongly binds to 40% of K‐562 cells and all morphologically recognizable erythroid precursor cells. Apart from two cases with acute erythroid leukemia, this antibody reacted with none of the malignant cells in the 229 tested hematopoietic malignancies, including the 121 nonerythroid acute leukemias. This finding seems to contradict the earlier observations by L. Andersson and colleagues that a considerable proportion of acute leukemias express GpA on their surface. One reason for this discrepancy might be the fact that VIE‐G4 detects only complete glycosylated GpA. If this is the sole explanation, this would mean that the poorly differentiated cells in these cases express incompletely glycosylated GpA.