scholarly journals UNG protects B cells from AID-induced telomere loss

2016 ◽  
Vol 213 (11) ◽  
pp. 2459-2472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena M. Cortizas ◽  
Astrid Zahn ◽  
Shiva Safavi ◽  
Joseph A. Reed ◽  
Francisco Vega ◽  
...  

Activation-induced deaminase (AID) initiates antibody gene diversification by creating G:U mismatches in the immunoglobulin loci. However, AID also deaminates nonimmunoglobulin genes, and failure to faithfully repair these off-target lesions can cause B cell lymphoma. In this study, we identify a mechanism by which processing of G:U produced by AID at the telomeres can eliminate B cells at risk of genomic instability. We show that telomeres are off-target substrates of AID and that B cell proliferation depends on protective repair by uracil-DNA glycosylase (UNG). In contrast, in the absence of UNG activity, deleterious processing by mismatch repair leads to telomere loss and defective cell proliferation. Indeed, we show that UNG deficiency reduces B cell clonal expansion in the germinal center in mice and blocks the proliferation of tumor B cells expressing AID. We propose that AID-induced damage at telomeres acts as a fail-safe mechanism to limit the tumor promoting activity of AID when it overwhelms uracil excision repair.

NAR Cancer ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiva Safavi ◽  
Ariane Larouche ◽  
Astrid Zahn ◽  
Anne-Marie Patenaude ◽  
Diana Domanska ◽  
...  

Abstract In B lymphocytes, the uracil N-glycosylase (UNG) excises genomic uracils made by activation-induced deaminase (AID), thus underpinning antibody gene diversification and oncogenic chromosomal translocations, but also initiating faithful DNA repair. Ung−/− mice develop B-cell lymphoma (BCL). However, since UNG has anti- and pro-oncogenic activities, its tumor suppressor relevance is unclear. Moreover, how the constant DNA damage and repair caused by the AID and UNG interplay affects B-cell fitness and thereby the dynamics of cell populations in vivo is unknown. Here, we show that UNG specifically protects the fitness of germinal center B cells, which express AID, and not of any other B-cell subset, coincident with AID-induced telomere damage activating p53-dependent checkpoints. Consistent with AID expression being detrimental in UNG-deficient B cells, Ung−/− mice develop BCL originating from activated B cells but lose AID expression in the established tumor. Accordingly, we find that UNG is rarely lost in human BCL. The fitness preservation activity of UNG contingent to AID expression was confirmed in a B-cell leukemia model. Hence, UNG, typically considered a tumor suppressor, acquires tumor-enabling activity in cancer cell populations that express AID by protecting cell fitness.


PLoS Genetics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. e1008960
Author(s):  
Pilar Delgado ◽  
Ángel F. Álvarez-Prado ◽  
Ester Marina-Zárate ◽  
Isora V. Sernandez ◽  
Sonia M. Mur ◽  
...  

Most B cell lymphomas originate from B cells that have germinal center (GC) experience and bear chromosome translocations and numerous point mutations. GC B cells remodel their immunoglobulin (Ig) genes by somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class switch recombination (CSR) in their Ig genes. Activation Induced Deaminase (AID) initiates CSR and SHM by generating U:G mismatches on Ig DNA that can then be processed by Uracyl-N-glycosylase (UNG). AID promotes collateral damage in the form of chromosome translocations and off-target SHM, however, the exact contribution of AID activity to lymphoma generation and progression is not completely understood. Here we show using a conditional knock-in strategy that AID supra-activity alone is not sufficient to generate B cell transformation. In contrast, in the absence of UNG, AID supra-expression increases SHM and promotes lymphoma. Whole exome sequencing revealed that AID heavily contributes to lymphoma SHM, promoting subclonal variability and a wider range of oncogenic variants. Thus, our data provide direct evidence that UNG is a brake to AID-induced intratumoral heterogeneity and evolution of B cell lymphoma.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pilar Delgado ◽  
Ángel F Álvarez-Prado ◽  
Ester Marina-Zárate ◽  
Isora V Sernandez ◽  
Sonia M Mur ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTMost B cell lymphomas originate from B cells that have germinal center (GC) experience and bear chromosome translocations and numerous point mutations. GCs B cells remodel their immunoglobulin (Ig) genes by somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class switch recombination (CSR) in their immunoglobulin (Ig) genes. Activation Induced Deaminase (AID) initiates CSR and SHM by generating U:G mismatches on Ig DNA that can then be processed by Uracyl-N-glycosylase (UNG). AID promotes collateral damage in the form of chromosome translocations and off-target SHM, however, the exact contribution of AID activity to lymphoma generation and progression is not completely understood. Here we show using a conditional knock-in strategy that AID supraactivity alone is not sufficient to generate B cell transformation. In contrast, in the absence of UNG, AID supra-expression increases SHM and promotes lymphoma. Whole exome sequencing revealed that AID heavily contributes to lymphoma SHM, promoting subclonal variability and a wider range of oncogenic variants. Thus, our data provide direct evidence that UNG is a brake to AID-induced intratumoral heterogeneity and evolution of B cell lymphoma.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 1621-1621
Author(s):  
Bihui Hilda Ye ◽  
Beibei Belinda Ding ◽  
Jian Jessica Yu ◽  
Raymond Y.-L. Yu ◽  
Lourdes M. Mendez ◽  
...  

Abstract During B cell development, cell proliferation and survival are regulated by stage-specific transcription factors. Accordingly, distinct oncogenic pathways are employed by B cell lymphomas representing different stages of B cell development. Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) contains at least two main phenotypic subtypes, i.e. the germinal center B cell-like (GCB-DLBCL) and the activated B cell-like (ABC-DLBCL) groups. It has been shown that GCB-DLBCL responds favorably to chemotherapy and expresses high levels of BCL6, a transcription repressor known to play a causative role in lymphomagenesis. In comparison, ABC-DLBCL has lower levels of BCL6, constitutively activated NF-kappaB and tends to be refractory to chemotherapy. In this study, we investigated the relationship between BCL6 and STAT3 expression/activation in DLBCL and normal GC B cells. Our results demonstrate that BCL6 directly inhibits transcription of the STAT3 gene by binding to two BCL6 sites in its 5′ regulatory region. As a result, high level STAT3 expression and activation are preferentially detected in ABC-DLBCL and BCL6-negative normal germinal center B cells. Specifically, in tonsillar GCs, STAT3 expression and activation is restricted to a previously uncharacterized subset of BCL6−Blimp-1− B cells in the apical light zone. The location and phenotype of these cells suggest that they are in the process of exiting the BCL6-directed GC program and transitioning to a plasma cell differentiation process governed by Blimp-1. The reciprocal relationship between BCL6 and STAT3 is also conserved in DLBCL such that STAT3 expression and activation is preferentially associated with the BCL6-low, ABC subtype. Most importantly, inactivating STAT3 by either AG490 or small interference RNA in ABC-DLBCL cells inhibits cell proliferation and triggers apoptosis. These phenotypes are accompanied by decreased expression of several known STAT3 target genes, including c-Myc, JunB and Mcl-1, and increased expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p27. In addition to identifying STAT3 as a novel BCL6 target gene, our results define STAT3 activation as a second oncogenic pathway operating in ABC-DLBCL and suggest that blocking STAT3 may be potentially therapeutic in treatment of these aggressive lymphomas.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 3735-3735
Author(s):  
Adam D Cohen ◽  
Indira D Joshi ◽  
Valentin Robu ◽  
Hossein Borghaei ◽  
Tahseen I. Al-Saleem ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3735 Agonist monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to CD137, a co-stimulatory TNF receptor family member expressed on activated T and NK cells, can induce immune-mediated rejection of multiple murine tumor types, and a fully human anti-CD137 mAb, BMS-663513, is in early-phase clinical trials in solid tumors. Significant activity has been seen in murine lymphoma models, both alone and in combination with anti-CD20 mAbs, providing rationale for clinical studies in lymphoma patients. Recently, however, CD137 up-regulation on activated human B cells has been reported, with CD137 ligation causing enhanced B cell proliferation and survival. This raises the concern that mAb binding to CD137, if present, on B cell neoplasms may promote tumor cell proliferation and/or resistance to apoptosis that may counteract the beneficial effects on T and NK cells. We therefore sought to assess the expression of CD137 on a series of human cell lines and primary tumor samples from patients with B-cell neoplasms, and if expressed, to explore the consequences of ligation with the anti-CD137 agonist BMS-66513. First, archived paraffin-embedded lymph node specimens from patients with low-grade B-cell lymphoma (n=11: 5 follicular, 4 marginal zone, 2 small lymphocytic) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (n=15) were stained for CD137 by immunohistochemistry. Reactive tonsillar tissue served as a positive control. No CD137 expression was observed within any tumor cells. Next, fresh samples from 14 additional patients with known tumor involvement of peripheral blood or bone marrow (8 chronic lymphocytic leukemia, 1 mantle cell lymphoma, 3 myeloma, 2 marginal zone lymphoma) were analyzed by multi-color flow cytometry. Again, no CD137 expression was observed on the gated neoplastic cells. Baseline surface expression of CD137 was similarly absent in all B cell-derived lines tested (Raji, FCTxFL2, FSCCL, DoHH2, Jeko-1, RPMI8226). However, activation with PMA/Ionomycin could reproducibly induce CD137 expression (% positive: 0.17% → 91%) after 24 hours in 1 of the lines: the follicular lymphoma FSCCL. Interestingly, this was the only line tested that lacked constitutive expression of CD137 ligand (CD137L), suggesting some reciprocal regulation of ligand and receptor expression. Despite this up-regulation of CD137, in vitro ligation of PMA/Ionomycin-activated FSCCL cells with BMS-66513 did not further increase tumor cell proliferation, nor protect the cells from activation-induced cell death, in contrast to effects of CD137 ligation reported in normal B cells (Zhang et al, J Immunol 2010; 184:787). Similarly, BMS-663513 treatment of activated, CD137+ FSCCL cells did not diminish the apoptosis induced by doxorubicin or bortezomib treatment. In addition, FSCCL cells recovered from ascites 7 and 14 days following intraperitoneal injection in SCID mice did not express CD137, implying that CD137 up-regulation is not occurring in vivo during tumor growth. Finally, treatment of FSCCL cells with rituximab, either in vitro or in vivo, did not induce CD137 expression. In conclusion, we demonstrate a lack of steady-state CD137 expression on malignant B cells, confirming the prior study by Houot et al (Blood 2009; 114:3431) and extending these findings to include CLL/SLL for the first time. While CD137 could be induced in a single cell line upon non-specific activation, CD137 expression on FSCCL cells was not seen under physiologic conditions likely to be encountered in the clinical setting, consistent with the primary patient data. Furthermore, even when CD137 was expressed, ligation with the agonist anti-CD137 mAb BMS-663513 did not provide a pro-proliferative or anti-apoptotic signal. These studies provide reassurance and further rationale for exploring agonist anti-CD137 antibodies as therapies for B cell neoplasms. Disclosures: Borghaei: Lilly, Genentech, Amgen, Pfizer: Honoraria, Research Funding. Jure-Kunkel:Bristol Meyers Squibb: Employment.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 2375-2375
Author(s):  
Nicolas Blin ◽  
Celine Bossard ◽  
Jean-Luc Harousseau ◽  
Catherine Charbonnel ◽  
Wilfried Gouraud ◽  
...  

Abstract Gene expression profiling has provided new insights into the understanding of mature B cell neoplasms by relating each one to its normal counterpart, so that they can be to some extent classified according to the corresponding normal B-cell stage. Thus, diffuse large B cell (DLBCL) and follicular lymphoma (FL) have been related to a germinal center precursor whereas mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) or marginal zone lymphoma (MZL) are more likely to derive from naïve and memory B cell, respectively. However, little is still known about the physiopathology of B-cell lymphomas and particularly the deregulated pathways involved in their oncogenesis. To further investigate that point, we performed laser capture microdissection (LCM) of the three anatomic lymphoid compartments (i.e germinal center, mantle zone and marginal zone) taken from nine normal spleens and lymph nodes and magnetic cell separation of the four normal B cell subpopulations (i.e naïve B cells, centroblasts, centrocytes and memory B cells) purified from twelve normal tonsils for gene expression profiling by cDNA microarray. These molecular profiles have been compared to those of the four most frequent mature B cell neoplasms in adult (i.e DLBCL, FL, MZL and MCL), each one isolated from five previously untreated patients. Unsupervised analysis by hierarchical clustering of the normal anatomic and cellular populations could discriminate the germinal from the extra-germinal populations by genes involved in cell proliferation (e.g. E2F5, CCNB2, BUB1B and AURKB), DNA repair (e.g. PCNA and EXO1), cytokine secretion (e.g. IL8, IL10RB, IL4R and TGFBI) and apoptosis (e.g. CASP8, CASP10, BCL2 and FAS). Supervised analysis of the comparison between each B-cell lymphoma and its anatomic and cellular physiologic equivalent identified molecular deregulations concerning several genes’families characterizing the different histologic subtypes. Genes associated with cellular adhesion and ubiquitin cycle were significantly up-regulated in MCL (FCGBP, ITGAE, USP7, VCAM1) and MZL (CTGF, CDH1, ITGAE) whereas germinal center derived lymphomas (i.e. DLBCL and FL) mainly showed up-regulation of genes involved in cell proliferation (TNFRSF17, SEPT8) and immune response (FCER1G, XBP1, IL1RN). Few deregulated genes were common to the four subtypes, principally associated with cell proliferation (CYR61, GPNMB), cytosqueleton organization (EPB41L3) and carbohydrates metabolism (GNPDA1), suggesting potential similar oncogenic pathways. Those preliminary results are compatible with both subtype-specific and overall mechanisms of lympomagenesis and should be verified in a wider range of samples to confirm the oncogenic events involved in this heterogeneous disease.


Hemato ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 281-304
Author(s):  
Laura Tomas-Roca ◽  
Marta Rodriguez ◽  
Ruth Alonso-Alonso ◽  
Socorro M. Rodriguez-Pinilla ◽  
Miguel Angel Piris

Diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL)s, the most common type of Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, constitute a heterogeneous group of disorders including different disease sites, strikingly diverse molecular features and a profound variability in the clinical behavior. Molecular studies and clinical trials have partially revealed the underlying causes for this variability and have made possible the recognition of some molecular variants susceptible of specific therapeutic approaches. The main histogenetic groups include the germinal center, activated B cells, thymic B cells and terminally differentiated B cells, a basic scheme where the large majority of DLBCL cases can be ascribed. The nodal/extranodal origin, specific mutational changes and microenvironment peculiarities provide additional layers of complexity. Here, we summarize the status of the knowledge and make some specific proposals for addressing the future development of targeted therapy for DLBC cases.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. S404-S405
Author(s):  
Caron A. Jacobson ◽  
Frederick L. Locke ◽  
Armin Ghobadi ◽  
David B. Miklos ◽  
Lazaros J. Lekakis ◽  
...  

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