2008
DOI: 10.1080/10428190802272676
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Presence of Hoechst low side populations in multiple myeloma

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Cited by 29 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…[6][7][8][9] In MM, the distinct fraction of SP cells has been detected in both MM cell lines and primary MM cells. 10 Matsui et al 11 have found the clonogenic property and drug resistance in SP fraction of MM cells, and reported the relationship between SP fraction and CD138 À phenotype. Recently, Jakubikova et al 12 have shown the clonogenic potential of SP cells, although they observed the heterogeneity in CD138 expression of SP cells.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[6][7][8][9] In MM, the distinct fraction of SP cells has been detected in both MM cell lines and primary MM cells. 10 Matsui et al 11 have found the clonogenic property and drug resistance in SP fraction of MM cells, and reported the relationship between SP fraction and CD138 À phenotype. Recently, Jakubikova et al 12 have shown the clonogenic potential of SP cells, although they observed the heterogeneity in CD138 expression of SP cells.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2,3 One reason for this high rate of relapse even after multimodal and/or high dose chemotherapy plus autologous stem cell transplantation might be the persistence of myeloma stem cells in the bone marrow, since these cells seem to escape standard chemotherapeutic agents. [4][5][6] As a consequence, MM remains essentially incurable by conventional anti-tumor therapy and patients continue to have a median survival of only 5 years. 7 New therapeutic targets, expressed by the bulk of end-stage myeloma cells as well as their dormant progenitors, are needed for the development of treatments capable of eradicating minimal residual disease and allowing for increased rate of cures or at least prolonged remissions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, our results on MM patient samples indicate that SP cells are heterogeneous for CD138 antigen expression (J.J., unpublished observations, September 2009), predominantly with lower expression of CD138, similar to a previous report. 37 Another study shows correlation of the CD138 Ϫ phenotype in MM cells with their trend to become apoptotic and fail to grow in vitro, 38 which raises the possibility that the status of CD138 expression in SP cells may exhibit differences depending on the conditions to which the tumor cells are exposed.Conflicting results have also been obtained regarding the SP cell division kinetics, because some groups identify the SP fraction as slowly proliferating cells 26,39 whereas others observe a high proliferation rate in SP cells. 25,40 Our data revealed that MM SP cells had a higher proliferation index/rate than MP cells.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%