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phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and Burkitt Lymphoma

phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride has been researched along with Burkitt Lymphoma in 1 studies

Phenylmethylsulfonyl Fluoride: An enzyme inhibitor that inactivates IRC-50 arvin, subtilisin, and the fatty acid synthetase complex.
phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride : An acyl fluoride with phenylmethanesulfonyl as the acyl group.

Burkitt Lymphoma: A form of undifferentiated malignant LYMPHOMA usually found in central Africa, but also reported in other parts of the world. It is commonly manifested as a large osteolytic lesion in the jaw or as an abdominal mass. B-cell antigens are expressed on the immature cells that make up the tumor in virtually all cases of Burkitt lymphoma. The Epstein-Barr virus (HERPESVIRUS 4, HUMAN) has been isolated from Burkitt lymphoma cases in Africa and it is implicated as the causative agent in these cases; however, most non-African cases are EBV-negative.

Research Excerpts

ExcerptRelevanceReference
"Adenosine was a weak inhibitor of natural cytotoxicity and may represent an alternate regulatory pathway."1.29Irreversible inhibition of human natural killer cell natural cytotoxicity by modification of the extracellular membrane by the adenine nucleotide analog 5'-p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl adenosine. ( Bjorndahl, JM; Cone, JC; Dombrowski, KE; Phillips, CA, 1995)

Research

Studies (1)

TimeframeStudies, this research(%)All Research%
pre-19900 (0.00)18.7374
1990's1 (100.00)18.2507
2000's0 (0.00)29.6817
2010's0 (0.00)24.3611
2020's0 (0.00)2.80

Authors

AuthorsStudies
Dombrowski, KE1
Cone, JC1
Bjorndahl, JM1
Phillips, CA1

Other Studies

1 other study available for phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and Burkitt Lymphoma

ArticleYear
Irreversible inhibition of human natural killer cell natural cytotoxicity by modification of the extracellular membrane by the adenine nucleotide analog 5'-p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl adenosine.
    Cellular immunology, 1995, Volume: 160, Issue:2

    Topics: Adenosine; Adenosine Diphosphate; Adenosine Triphosphate; Adenylyl Imidodiphosphate; Benzoates; Burk

1995