Effect of Activation of the Epstein-Barr Virus Genome on Expression of B Cell Differentiation Antigens of Burkitt's Lymphoma Lines

1988 ◽  
Vol 32 (9) ◽  
pp. 957-964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Yokochi ◽  
Yoshiko Inoue ◽  
Hitoshi Iwata ◽  
Toshiaki Miyadai ◽  
Yoshinobu Kimura
Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (9) ◽  
pp. 1827-1833 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Billaud ◽  
F Rousset ◽  
A Calender ◽  
M Cordier ◽  
JP Aubry ◽  
...  

Abstract Lymphocyte function-associated antigens 1 and 3 (LFA-1, LFA-3) and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) are cell surface adhesion molecules necessary for immune processes requiring intercellular contact. It was recently proposed that malignant Burkitt's lymphoma cells (BL) may escape from immunosurveillance through the downregulation of LFA-1 (CD11a/CD18) or LFA-3 (CD58) and ICAM-1 (CD54) molecules. Expression of these three adhesion antigens was investigated in 19 BL lines. LFA-1 or LFA-3 expression was found to be absent or low in 8 of 11 Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genome positive BL, but strongly expressed on all nonmalignant EBV genome positive lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCL). Negative or weak expression of LFA-1 and LFA-3 was also observed in 7 of 8 EBV genome negative BL. ICAM-1 was found to be expressed on the cell surface of the majority of BL lines. BL lines growing as individual cells did not express LFA-1, whereas clump- forming BL lines expressed this marker involved in B-cell homotypic aggregation. Expression of LFA-1 and LFA-3 was induced on in vitro infection of EBV-negative BL cells with the immortalizing EBV strain B95–8, and weakly with the nonimmortalizing EBV strain P3HR1. EBNA2 and LMP, two EBV encoded proteins expressed in LCL and in BL infected with B95–8 (BL/B95–8), are not expressed in P3HR1 infected BL cells (BL/P3HR1). Stable expression of EBNA2 after gene transfer in a BL/P3HR1 cell line did not restore the level of LFA-1 and LFA-3 found on BL/B95–8 cells. In EBV-positive BL cells expressing LFA-1 and LFA-3, LMP was found coexpressed, supporting the recent finding of the role of LMP in B-cell adhesion receptor activation. Consequently, diminished LFA-1 and LFA-3 expression appears to be a common characteristic of numerous EBV-positive BL as well as EBV-negative BL. These findings are discussed in the framework of BL pathogenesis.


Cell ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 415-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Thorley-Lawson ◽  
Robert T. Schooley ◽  
Atul K. Bhan ◽  
Lee M. Nadler

1991 ◽  
Vol 173 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Rowe ◽  
L S Young ◽  
J Crocker ◽  
H Stokes ◽  
S Henderson ◽  
...  

When human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) from Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-seropositive donors are injected intraperitoneally into SCID mice, EBV+ B cell tumors develop within weeks. A preliminary report (Mosier, D. E., R. J. Gulizia, S. M. Baird, D. D. Richman, D. B. Wilson, R. I. Fox, and T. J. Kipps, 1989. Blood. 74(Suppl. 1):52a) has suggested that such tumors resemble the EBV-positive malignancy, Burkitt's lymphoma. The present work shows that generally the human (hu) PBL-SCID tumors are distinct from Burkitt's lymphoma and instead resemble lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) generated by EBV-infection of normal B cells in vitro in terms of: (a) their cell surface phenotype, with expression of B cell activation antigens and adhesion molecules, (b) normal karyotype, and (c) viral phenotype, with expression of all the transformation-associated EBV latent proteins and, in a minority of cells, productive cycle antigens. Indeed, in vitro-transformed LCLs also grow when inoculated into SCID mice, the frequency of tumor outgrowth correlating with the in vitro growth phenotype of the LCL which is itself determined by the identity of the transforming virus (i.e., type 1 or type 2 EBV). Histologically the PBL-derived hu-SCID tumors resemble the EBV+ large cell lymphomas that develop in immuno-suppressed patients and, like the human tumors, often present at multiple sites as individual monoclonal or oligoclonal foci. The remarkable efficiency of tumor development in the hu-SCID model suggests that lymphomagenesis involves direct outgrowth of EBV-transformed B cells without requirement for secondary genetic changes, and that selection on the basis of cell growth rate alone is sufficient to explain the monoclonal/oligoclonal nature of tumor foci. EBV+ large cell lymphoma of the immunosuppressed may arise in a similar way.


2006 ◽  
Vol 209 (3) ◽  
pp. 360-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Larousserie ◽  
E Bardel ◽  
A Coulomb L'Herminé ◽  
D Canioni ◽  
N Brousse ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 965-975 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Habeshaw ◽  
Q. Y. Yao ◽  
A. I. Bell ◽  
D. Morton ◽  
A. B. Rickinson

ABSTRACT The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) nuclear antigen EBNA1 is the only viral protein detectably expressed in virus genome-positive Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL); recent work has suggested that viral strains with particular EBNA1 sequence changes are preferentially associated with this tumor and that, within a patient, the tumor-associated variant may have arisen de novo as a rare mutant of the dominant preexisting EBV strain (K. Bhatia, A. Raj, M. J. Gutierrez, J. G. Judde, G. Spangler, H. Venkatesh, and I. T. Magrath, Oncogene 13:177–181, 1996). In the present work we first study 12 BL patients and show that the virus strain in the tumor is identical in EBNA1 sequence and that it is matched at several other polymorphic loci to the dominant strain rescued in vitro from the patient’s normal circulating B cells. We then analyze BL-associated virus strains from three different geographic areas (East Africa, Europe, and New Guinea) alongside virus isolates from geographically matched control donors by using sequence changes in two separate regions of the EBNA1 gene (N-terminal codons 1 to 60 and C-terminal codons 460 to 510) to identify the EBNA1 subtype of each virus. Different geographic areas displayed different spectra of EBNA1 subtypes, with only limited overlap between them; even type 2 virus strains, which tended to be more homogeneous than their type 1 counterparts, showed geographic differences at the EBNA1 locus. Most importantly, within any one area the EBNA1 subtypes associated with BL were also found to be prevalent in the general population. We therefore find no evidence that Burkitt lymphomagenesis involves a selection for EBV strains with particular EBNA1 sequence changes.


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