Hodgkin's disease is divulging its secrets at last. Despite the fact that Hodgkin's disease was the first lymphoma to be recognized as a distinct clinical entity 1, it has proved to be one of the most difficult lymphomas to approach molecularly. The clonal, malignant Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg (H/RS) cells of Hodgkin's disease represent <1% of the cells in an involved lymph node and are characteristically surrounded by a mixture of granulocytes, plasma cells, and T cells. Although several cell lines have been derived from patients with Hodgkin's disease, it has been difficult to prove, in most cases, that the cell lines are clonally related to the H/RS cells of the patients. Therefore, molecular approaches to the etiology and pathogenesis of Hodgkin's disease have relied on single cell micromanipulation of H/RS cells coupled with PCR amplification of RNA and genomic DNA....
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17 January 2000
Commentary|
January 17 2000
The Molecular and Cellular Origins of Hodgkin's Disease
Louis M. Staudt
Louis M. Staudt
aMetabolism Branch, Division of Clinical Sciences, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
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Louis M. Staudt
aMetabolism Branch, Division of Clinical Sciences, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Received:
December 07 1999
Accepted:
December 13 1999
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
2000
The Rockefeller University Press
J Exp Med (2000) 191 (2): 207–212.
Article history
Received:
December 07 1999
Accepted:
December 13 1999
Citation
Louis M. Staudt; The Molecular and Cellular Origins of Hodgkin's Disease. J Exp Med 17 January 2000; 191 (2): 207–212. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.191.2.207
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