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ISSN 2063-5346
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CD45 in clinical medicine and Multiple Myeloma

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Mohammed Gamal Mohammed Abukhisha Alshamy, Esam Nasr Mohammed, Ayman Fathy Abd El Halim, Shimaa Abdelmoniem Mohamed, Elsayyed Anany Metwally
» doi: 10.53555/ecb/2023.12.Si12.251

Abstract

CD45 is an evolutionary highly conserved receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase exclusively expressed on all nucleated cells of the hematopoietic system. It is characterized by the expression of several isoforms, specific to a certain cell type and the developmental or activation status of the cell. CD45 is one of the key players in the initiation of T cell receptor signaling by controlling the activation of the Src family protein-tyrosine kinases Lck and Fyn. CD45 deficiency results in T- and B-lymphocyte dysfunction in the form of severe combined immune deficiency. It also plays a significant role in autoimmune diseases and cancer as well as in infectious diseases including fungal infections. The knowledge collected on CD45 biology is rather vast, but it remains unclear whether all findings in rodent immune cells also apply to human CD45. Due to increasing mortality from multiple myeloma and CD45 expression was seldom used before as a prognostic biomarker in MM patients so, it is important to find new prognostic biomarkers and to find out prognostic effect of immunophenotyping in MM as little reports were performed on this subject before.

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