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Blood, 12 February 2009, Vol. 113, No. 7, pp. 1501-1503. Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on December 2, 2008; DOI 10.1182/blood-2008-04-154484.
LYMPHOID NEOPLASIA Splenic plasma cells can serve as a source of amyloidogenic light chains1 Human Immunology and Cancer Program, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Graduate School of Medicine, Knoxville; and 2 Department of Genetics and Pathology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Bone marrow-derived clonal plasma cells, as found in systemic amyloidogenic light chain–associated (AL) amyloidosis, are presumed to be the source of light chains that deposit as fibrils in tissues throughout the body. Paradoxically, people with this disorder, in contrast to multiple myeloma, often have a low percentage of such cells, and it is unknown whether this relatively sparse number can synthesize enough amyloidogenic precursor to form the extensive pathology that occurs. To investigate whether another hematopoietic organ, the spleen, also contains monoclonal light chain–producing plasma cells, we have immunostained such tissue from 26 AL patients with the use of antiplasma cell, antifree
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