Rituximab Infusion after Allogeneic HCT Delays B Cell Reconstitution and Alloimmunity.

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 2982-2982
Author(s):  
Bita Sahaf ◽  
Kartoosh Heydari ◽  
George Chen ◽  
David Miklos

Abstract B cells are implicated in the pathophysiology of chronic graft-vs-host disease (cGVHD) and anti-B cell rituximab is effective cGVHD therapy. We have treated 31 MCL and CLL patients with a nonmyeloablative transplant preparative regimen consisting of total lymphoid irradiation (TLI, 80 cGy in 10 fractions, days -11 to -1) and anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG, 1.5mg/kg/day, days -11 to -7, total 7.5mg/kg) followed by rituximab 375mg/m2 on days 56, 63, 70, and 77 after transplant. Primary GVHD prophylaxis was mycophenolic acid and cyclosporine tapered off by 6 months. Thus far, two patients with MCL have died of disease progression before rituximab infusion and the remaining 29 are alive. Here we study B cell reconstitution in 12 patients with more than one year of follow-up. We used Hi-D FACS technology to distinguish common lymphoid progenitors (CD34+CD117+), early B cell progenitors (CD34+CD10+CD19+), pre B cells (CD3−CD19+CD10+CD34−), immature B cells (CD3−CD19+CD10+CD20+CD5−IgM+), mature and memory B cells (CD3−CD19+CD20+CD27+), and plasma cells (CD138+CD38+). Peripheral B cells (CD19+CD20+) remained undetectable 6 and 9 months after transplant. Peripheral blood CD19+ cells were first detected in 3/9 patients at 1 year and 6/6 patients at 1.5 years. The majority of recovering peripheral blood B cells expressed a memory phenotype (CD19+CD27+, n–=6). Bone marrow aspirates collected 180 and 365 days post transplant showed CD34+CD117+ lymphoid progenitors (n=4) are increased after rituximab and then decline from 13–20% of cells 180 days post transplant to 3–8% of cells 365 days post transplant. Control patients transplanted using a TLI-ATG regimen without rituximab infusion show a lymphoid progenitor cell frequency of 4–7% (n=3). CD19+CD10+ immature progenitor B cells accumulated after rituximab, comprised 3–6% of lymphoid cells in the bone marrow 90 and 180 days after HCT (n=4), and with time were replaced by mature B cells lacking CD10 expression. IgM and/or IgD expressing mature cells (that usually express CD20) were rarely detected in bone marrow until peripheral CD19+ B cell recovery. As expected the frequency of CD19+CD27+ mature memory B cells was very low at 0.3–1.5% (n=4). Finally, CD38+CD138+ plasma cells accounted for 0.5–2% of bone marrow before and after rituximab. In summary, B cells recover from increased proportion of lymphoid progenitors with reconstitution recapitulating B cell ontogeny. No adverse infusion events occurred with rituximab and infectious complications reflected usual transplant incidence including CMV and VZV reactivation, influenza B, aspergillus and pseudomonal bacteremia. Plasma IgG levels increased from the patient’s peritransplant baseline to 110% at 9 months, 158% at 12 months, and 124% at 18months. At 6, 9, and 12 months, EBV titer was 76%, 104%, and 103% relative to pretransplant patient titers demonstrating protective antibodies are maintained despite rituximab therapy presumably secreted from long-lived CD20 negative plasma cells. Thus far, no allogeneic antibody responses have developed in the five male with female donors against H-Y antigens and suggest post-HCT rituximab prevent or diminish allogeneic B cell responses. This first trial of rituximab treatment 2 months after allogeneic HCT was well tolerated, patients maintained protective humoral immunity, and peripheral blood B cells reconstituted 12–18 months after transplant.

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 4998-4998
Author(s):  
Lucie Kovarova ◽  
Pavla Zarbochova ◽  
Tamara Varmuzova ◽  
Ivana Buresova ◽  
Karthick Raja Muthu Raja ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4998 Background. Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) is the most common plasma cell disorder which can eventually progress into malignant multiple myeloma (MM). Plasma cells (PCs) are the terminal stadium of B cells differentiation, but it is still unclear which population is the source of pathological PCs with malignant transformation and which population is involved in and may give rise to clonogenic myeloma stem cells. Aims. Phenotypic analysis of CD19+ cell subpopulations in monoclonal gammopathy patients and healthy volunteers to asses their frequency and to find differences on cellular level. Methods. Total of 38 samples was analyzed (16 newly diagnosed untreated MM patients, 12 untreated MGUS persons and 10 healthy donors). CD19+ cells were analyzed for surface expression of CD24, CD27, CD38, and IgD by 5-colors immunophenotyping. Subpopulations of pre-plasma cells consist of transitional B cells (CD24+CD38+), naïve B cells (CD38-IgD+), activated B cells (CD38+IgD+), preGC B cells (CD38++IgD+) and memory B cells (CD38-/+IgD-). These were evaluated in whole lysed peripheral blood together with circulating plasmablast/plasma cells (CD38++IgD-). Bone marrow of MGUS and MM patients was analyzed for number of transitional, immature and memory B cells. Results. Flow cytometric analysis shown no statistical difference when compared number of transitional B cells (1.8%; 3.0% and 1.2%) and activated B cells (54.6%; 62.1% and 45.5%) in peripheral blood of healthy volunteers, MGUS and MM patients, respectively. There was found lower number of circulating plasmablast/plasma cells in peripheral blood of healthy volunteers than in MGUS (1.0% vs. 1.7%; p<0.01), but there was no statistically significant difference for MM (1.7%) when compared to others. The highest number of peripheral naive B cells was found in healthy volunteers (21.4%; p<0.001) and the highest number of peripheral memory B cells was found in MM patients (32.9%; p<0.01) when compared to other groups. There was found also higher number of peripheral preGC B cells in MGUS and MM patients (2.7% vs. 1.6% vs. 1.3%; p<0.05) than in healthy volunteers, respectively. Although numbers of transitional and immature B cells in bone marrow were different for MGUS and MM, the only statistically significant difference was found in number of memory B cells (25.4% for MGUS vs. 11.9% for MM; p<0.01). Summary/Conclusions. Our result showed differences in CD19+ subsets when compared peripheral blood of healthy volunteers and monoclonal gammopathy patients as well as in bone marrow of monoclonal gammopathy group. These differences could be a sign of ongoing changes in B cells of monoclonal gammopathy patients. Further analysis will be also focused on changes at DNA level to confirm clonality of selected subpopulations and to find possible myeloma stem cells source. Supported by GACR 301/09/P457, GACR GAP304/10/1395, MSMT LC06027, MSM0021622434, IGA 10408-3, IGA 10406-3. Disclosures: Hajek: Janssen-Cilag: Honoraria; Celgene: Honoraria; Merck, Sharp, and Dohme: Honoraria.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Artem I. Mikelov ◽  
Evgeniia I. Alekseeva ◽  
Ekaterina A. Komech ◽  
Dmitriy B. Staroverov ◽  
Maria A. Turchaninova ◽  
...  

B-cell mediated immune memory holds both plasticity and conservatism to respond to new challenges and repeated infections. Here, we analyze the dynamics of immunoglobulin heavy chain (IGH) repertoires of memory B cells, plasmablasts and plasma cells sampled several times during one year from peripheral blood of volunteers without severe inflammatory diseases. We reveal a high degree of clonal persistence in individual memory B-cell subsets with inter-individual convergence in memory and antibody-secreting cells (ASCs). Clonotypes in ASCs demonstrate clonal relatedness to memory B cells and are transient in peripheral blood. Two clusters of expanded clonal lineages displayed different prevalence of memory B cells, isotypes, and persistence. Phylogenetic analysis revealed signs of reactivation of persisting memory B cell-enriched clonal lineages, accompanied by new rounds of affinity maturation during proliferation to ASCs. Negative selection contributes to both, persisting and reactivated lineages, saving functionality and specificity of BCRs to protect from the current and future pathogens.


Blood ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 1922-1930 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Goto ◽  
SJ Kennel ◽  
M Abe ◽  
M Takishita ◽  
M Kosaka ◽  
...  

Abstract A monoclonal antibody (MoAb) that defines a novel terminal B-cell- restricted antigen, termed HM1.24, was developed against a human plasma cell line. The MoAb, designated anti-HM1.24, reacted with five different human myeloma cell lines, as well as with monoclonal neoplastic plasma cells obtained from the bone marrow or peripheral blood of patients with multiple myeloma or Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia. The HM1.24 antigen was also expressed by mature Ig- secreting B cells (plasma cells and lymphoplasmacytoid cells) but not by other cells contained in the peripheral blood, bone marrow, liver, spleen, kidney, or heart of normal individuals or patients with non- plasma-cell-related malignancies. The anti-HM1.24 MoAb bound to human myeloma RPMI 8226 cells with an affinity constant of 9.2 x 10(8) M-1, indicating approximately 84,000 sites/cell. By immunoprecipitation assay under reducing conditions, this MoAb identified a membrane glycoprotein that had a molecular weight of 29 to 33 kD. Our studies indicate that the HM1.24-related protein represents a specific marker of late-stage B-cell maturation and potentially serves as a target antigen for the immunotherapy of multiple myeloma and related plasma cell dyscrasias.


Blood ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 1922-1930 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Goto ◽  
SJ Kennel ◽  
M Abe ◽  
M Takishita ◽  
M Kosaka ◽  
...  

A monoclonal antibody (MoAb) that defines a novel terminal B-cell- restricted antigen, termed HM1.24, was developed against a human plasma cell line. The MoAb, designated anti-HM1.24, reacted with five different human myeloma cell lines, as well as with monoclonal neoplastic plasma cells obtained from the bone marrow or peripheral blood of patients with multiple myeloma or Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia. The HM1.24 antigen was also expressed by mature Ig- secreting B cells (plasma cells and lymphoplasmacytoid cells) but not by other cells contained in the peripheral blood, bone marrow, liver, spleen, kidney, or heart of normal individuals or patients with non- plasma-cell-related malignancies. The anti-HM1.24 MoAb bound to human myeloma RPMI 8226 cells with an affinity constant of 9.2 x 10(8) M-1, indicating approximately 84,000 sites/cell. By immunoprecipitation assay under reducing conditions, this MoAb identified a membrane glycoprotein that had a molecular weight of 29 to 33 kD. Our studies indicate that the HM1.24-related protein represents a specific marker of late-stage B-cell maturation and potentially serves as a target antigen for the immunotherapy of multiple myeloma and related plasma cell dyscrasias.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 111 (9) ◽  
pp. 4653-4659 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Mamani-Matsuda ◽  
Antonio Cosma ◽  
Sandra Weller ◽  
Ahmad Faili ◽  
Caroline Staib ◽  
...  

Abstract The fact that you can vaccinate a child at 5 years of age and find lymphoid B cells and antibodies specific for this vaccination 70 years later remains an immunologic enigma. It has never been determined how these long-lived memory B cells are maintained and whether they are protected by storage in a special niche. We report that, whereas blood and spleen compartments present similar frequencies of IgG+ cells, antismallpox memory B cells are specifically enriched in the spleen where they account for 0.24% of all IgG+ cells (ie, 10-20 million cells) more than 30 years after vaccination. They represent, in contrast, only 0.07% of circulating IgG+ B cells in blood (ie, 50-100 000 cells). An analysis of patients either splenectomized or rituximab-treated confirmed that the spleen is a major reservoir for long-lived memory B cells. No significant correlation was observed between the abundance of these cells in blood and serum titers of antivaccinia virus antibodies in this study, including in the contrasted cases of B cell– depleting treatments. Altogether, these data provide evidence that in humans, the two arms of B-cell memory—long-lived memory B cells and plasma cells—have specific anatomic distributions—spleen and bone marrow—and homeostatic regulation.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 1745-1745
Author(s):  
Kanutte Huse ◽  
Maren Bakkeb∅ ◽  
Lise Forfang ◽  
Vera I. Hilden ◽  
Erlend B. Smeland ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1745 Introduction: TGF-β has been shown to play an important role in directing class switch recombination in human B cells. Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are members of the TGF-β family, and we have previously shown that BMP-6 inhibits proliferation of B cell progenitors as well as mature B cells in humans. However, how various BMP members affect Ig production and B-cell maturation to plasma cells have not been investigated. Here we studied the effects of various BMPs in CD27- naive and CD27+ memory B cells from peripheral blood of healthy human donors. Methods: We used flow immunomagnetic beads and flow cytometry cell sorting to purify CD19+CD27- naive and CD19+CD27+ memory B cells from peripheral blood of healthy donors, and investigated BMP induced effects on in vitro proliferation, cell death and Ig production as measured by thymidine incorporation assay, propidium iodide staining and ELISA, respectively. To separate direct inhibition of plasma cell differentiation from indirect effects via suppression of proliferation and induction of apoptosis, CFSE tracking of cell division was combined with immunophenotyping of cultured cells to identify CD27+CD38+ plasma cells. Expression of transcription factors and AICDA were measured by quantitative real-time PCR. Results: BMP-2, -4, -6 and -7 specifically inhibited CD40L- and IL-21-induced production of IgM, IgG and IgA. BMP-6 was the most potent inhibitor, reducing the Ig production by 70% in memory B cells and more than 50% in naive B cells. By investigating the mechanisms for reduced Ig production, we found a striking difference between the structurally similar BMP-6 and BMP-7. BMP-6 directly inhibited differentiation to CD27+CD38+ plasma cells, whereas BMP-7 only had minor effects on differentiation. Instead, BMP-7 mainly affected Ig production indirectly by inducing apoptosis. Furthermore, we explored BMP-6-induced signaling and gene regulation in more detail in memory B cells. BMP-6 up-regulated Id1, Id2 and Id3 gene expression in CD40L- and IL-21-stimulated cells (6.1-fold, 1.7-fold and 4.0-fold induction after 48 hours culture with BMP-6, respectively). In contrast, BMP-6 potently inhibited CD40L- and IL-21-induced upregulation of the transcription factor XBP-1, necessary for the late stages of plasmacytic differentiation. Expression of transcription factors regulating earlier stages (IRF4, PRDM1) was not affected, indicating that BMP-6 only modulates late events of plasma cell development. Conclusion: These results show that BMPs potently suppress Ig production in mature human B cells by inhibiting differentiation or by inducing cell death. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (9) ◽  
pp. 3970-3978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shujun Guo ◽  
Qingqing Chen ◽  
Xiaoli Liang ◽  
Mimi Mu ◽  
Jing He ◽  
...  

Objective To investigate levels of regulatory B (Breg) cells, plasma cells, and memory B cells in the peripheral blood, and interleukin (IL)-10 in the serum of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, and to determine the correlation between Breg cell levels and the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score. Methods Levels of Breg cells, plasma cells, and memory B cells in the peripheral blood of 12 MS patients were measured using flow cytometry. IL-10 serum levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The correlation between Breg cell levels and MS EDSS score was measured using Pearson’s correlation coefficient. Results Compared with healthy controls, MS patients had decreased levels of CD19+CD24hiCD38hi Breg cells in their peripheral blood and reduced serum levels of IL-10; however, the ratios of CD19+CD27hiCD38hi plasma cells and CD19+CD27+CD24hi memory B cells to total B cells did not differ significantly between healthy controls and MS patients. CD19+CD24hiCD38hi Breg cell levels in the peripheral blood of MS patients were not significantly correlated with MS EDSS score. Conclusion Peripheral blood CD19+CD24hiCD38hi Breg cell levels and serum IL-10 levels were reduced in MS patients compared with controls, but Breg cell levels were not correlated with MS EDSS score.


1998 ◽  
Vol 187 (8) ◽  
pp. 1169-1178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Arpin ◽  
Odette de Bouteiller ◽  
Diane Razanajaona ◽  
Isabelle Fugier-Vivier ◽  
Francine Brière ◽  
...  

Human myeloma are incurable hematologic cancers of immunoglobulin-secreting plasma cells in bone marrow. Although malignant plasma cells can be almost eradicated from the patient's bone marrow by chemotherapy, drug-resistant myeloma precursor cells persist in an apparently cryptic compartment. Controversy exists as to whether myeloma precursor cells are hematopoietic stem cells, pre–B cells, germinal center (GC) B cells, circulating memory cells, or plasma blasts. This situation reflects what has been a general problem in cancer research for years: how to compare a tumor with its normal counterpart. Although several studies have demonstrated somatically mutated immunoglobulin variable region genes in multiple myeloma, it is unclear if myeloma cells are derived from GCs or post-GC memory B cells. Immunoglobulin (Ig)D-secreting myeloma have two unique immunoglobulin features, including a biased λ light chain expression and a Cμ–Cδ isotype switch. Using surface markers, we have previously isolated a population of surface IgM−IgD+CD38+ GC B cells that carry the most impressive somatic mutation in their IgV genes. Here we show that this population of GC B cells displays the two molecular features of IgD-secreting myeloma cells: a biased λ light chain expression and a Cμ–Cδ isotype switch. The demonstration of these peculiar GC B cells to differentiate into IgD-secreting plasma cells but not memory B cells both in vivo and in vitro suggests that IgD-secreting plasma and myeloma cells are derived from GCs.


2000 ◽  
Vol 191 (7) ◽  
pp. 1149-1166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louise J. McHeyzer-Williams ◽  
Melinda Cool ◽  
Michael G. McHeyzer-Williams

The mechanisms that regulate B cell memory and the rapid recall response to antigen remain poorly defined. This study focuses on the rapid expression of B cell memory upon antigen recall in vivo, and the replenishment of quiescent B cell memory that follows. Based on expression of CD138 and B220, we reveal a unique and major subtype of antigen-specific memory B cells (B220−CD138−) that are distinct from antibody-secreting B cells (B220+/−CD138+) and B220+CD138− memory B cells. These nonsecreting somatically mutated B220− memory responders rapidly dominate the splenic response and comprise &gt;95% of antigen-specific memory B cells that migrate to the bone marrow. By day 42 after recall, the predominant quiescent memory B cell population in the spleen (75–85%) and the bone marrow (&gt;95%) expresses the B220− phenotype. Upon adoptive transfer, B220− memory B cells proliferate to a lesser degree but produce greater amounts of antibody than their B220+ counterparts. The pattern of cellular differentiation after transfer indicates that B220− memory B cells act as stable self-replenishing intermediates that arise from B220+ memory B cells and produce antibody-secreting cells on rechallenge with antigen. Cell surface phenotype and Ig isotype expression divide the B220− compartment into two main subsets with distinct patterns of integrin and coreceptor expression. Thus, we identify new cellular components of B cell memory and propose a model for long-term protective immunity that is regulated by a complex balance of committed memory B cells with subspecialized immune function.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document