scholarly journals CD5 and immunoglobulin V gene expression in B-cell lymphomas and chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (7) ◽  
pp. 1518-1524
Author(s):  
R Mayer ◽  
T Logtenberg ◽  
J Strauchen ◽  
A Dimitriu-Bona ◽  
L Mayer ◽  
...  

We studied the expression of CD5 and immunoglobulin variable gene families in a panel of monoclonal Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) transformed lines, chronic lymphocytic leukemias (CLLs) and CD5+ and CD5- B-cell lymphomas. The CD5 gene expression was in all cases identical to that of T-cell malignancies. The utilization of the various VH and VK gene families was roughly proportional to the estimated gene family size in EBV lines obtained from adult healthy subjects. In contrast we found a statistically significant biased usage of VH6 in CLL and VH5 in CD5+ lymphomas as compared with EBV lines, and of VKIII in both CLL and CD5+ lymphomas as compared with EBV lines. Some differences in the variable gene usage were also noted when comparing CD5+ and CD5- lymphomas. These findings are analyzed in the context of possible mechanisms involved in the malignant transformation of CD5+ B cells.

Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (7) ◽  
pp. 1518-1524 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Mayer ◽  
T Logtenberg ◽  
J Strauchen ◽  
A Dimitriu-Bona ◽  
L Mayer ◽  
...  

Abstract We studied the expression of CD5 and immunoglobulin variable gene families in a panel of monoclonal Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) transformed lines, chronic lymphocytic leukemias (CLLs) and CD5+ and CD5- B-cell lymphomas. The CD5 gene expression was in all cases identical to that of T-cell malignancies. The utilization of the various VH and VK gene families was roughly proportional to the estimated gene family size in EBV lines obtained from adult healthy subjects. In contrast we found a statistically significant biased usage of VH6 in CLL and VH5 in CD5+ lymphomas as compared with EBV lines, and of VKIII in both CLL and CD5+ lymphomas as compared with EBV lines. Some differences in the variable gene usage were also noted when comparing CD5+ and CD5- lymphomas. These findings are analyzed in the context of possible mechanisms involved in the malignant transformation of CD5+ B cells.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 125 (14) ◽  
pp. 2228-2238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiun-Han Lin ◽  
Ju-Yin Lin ◽  
Ya-Ching Chou ◽  
Mei-Ru Chen ◽  
Te-Huei Yeh ◽  
...  

Key PointsEBV LMP2A alters B-cell gene expression; E47 and PU.1 are repressed by LMP2A, resulting in downregulation of MHC class II expression.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 2035-2043 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Furukawa ◽  
L. Wei ◽  
S. M. Krams ◽  
C. O. Esquivel ◽  
O. M. Martinez

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 773-773
Author(s):  
Dirk Kienle ◽  
Alexander Kröber ◽  
Dirk Winkler ◽  
Daniel Mertens ◽  
Annett Habermann ◽  
...  

Abstract V3-21 gene usage defines a distinct genetic subgroup of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) characterized by a poor clinical outcome regardless of the VH mutation status. V3-21 cases exhibit a highly characteristic B-cell receptor (BCR) structure as demonstrated by homologous CDR3 sequences and a restricted use of VL genes implicating a common antigen involved in tumor pathogenesis of this specific CLL subgroup. To investigate the role of antigenic stimulation in the pathogenesis of V3-21 using CLL, we analyzed the quantitative expression of genes involved in BCR signaling (ZAP-70, SYK, BLNK, LYN, PI3K, PLCG2, FOS), B-cell activation (TRAF3, STAT6, NFKB), and cell cycle or apoptosis control (ATM, BCL-2, BAX, CDK4, CCND1, CCND2, CCND3, p27, E2F1, MYC) in V3-21 cases in comparison to VH mutated (VH MUT) and VH unmutated (VH UM) cases not using the V3-21 gene. To obtain native expression signatures we studied a non-CD19-purified (nPU) cohort (V3-21: 18 cases, equally divided into VH mutated and VH unmutated cases; VH MUT: 17; VH UM: 19) and, for verification, a CD19-purified (PU) cohort (V3-21: 10 cases, equally divided into VH mutated and unmutated; VH MUT: 12; VH UM: 16) to exclude a contamination of the results by non-tumor cells. All cases were analyzed by FISH for +3q, 6q-, +8q, 11q-, +12q, 13q-, 17p-, and t(11;14) to avoid major imbalances of genomic alterations between the subgroups under study. As expected, ZAP-70 expression was higher in VH UM as compared to VH MUT cases in the nPU (p=0.007) as well as the PU cohort (p=0.009). V3-21 cases showed a higher ZAP-70 expression as compared to VH MUT (nPU: p=0.033; PU: p=0.038). This applied also when restricting this comparison to V3-21 mutated cases (nPU: p=0.018). Median ZAP-70 expression in the PU cohort was 1.15 in VH MUT vs. 7.69 in VH UM cases, as compared to 7.05 in V3-21 cases (V3-21 mutated cases: 10.69; V3-21 unmutated: 6.7). Other genes differentially expressed between the V3-21 and VH MUT subgroups in nPU cases were PI3K (p=0.048), PLCG2 (p=0.007), CCND2 (p=0.003), p27 (p=0.003), BCL-2 (p=0.025), and ATM (p=0.006). In addition, a set of genes was detected with a differential expression between V3-21 and VH UM (nPU) including PLCG2 (p=0.014), NFKB (p=0.023), CCND2 (p=0.001), p27 (0.002), and BAX (p=0.028). Notably, except for ZAP-70, all of the differentially expressed genes showed a lower expression in V3-21 as compared to the other subgroups. When comparing the V3-21 mutated and V3-21 unmutated subgroups (nPU), there were no significant gene expression differences except for CDK4, which showed a lower expression in V3-21 unmutated cases. Therefore, cases with V3-21 usage appear to show a rather homogeneous gene expression pattern independently of the VH mutation status, which can be distinguished from VH MUT and VH UM cases not using V3-21. The expression differences observed suggest a role of differential BCR signaling in the pathogenesis of this distinct CLL subgroup. Deregulation of cell cycle, apoptosis, and candidate genes such as ATM indicate the involvement of additional pathways in the pathogenesis of CLL cases using V3-21.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pier P. Piccaluga ◽  
Alessandra Weber ◽  
Maria R. Ambrosio ◽  
Yonis Ahmed ◽  
Lorenzo Leoncini

2017 ◽  
Vol 91 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shi-Dong Ma ◽  
Ming-Han Tsai ◽  
James C. Romero-Masters ◽  
Erik A. Ranheim ◽  
Shane M. Huebner ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection is associated with B cell lymphomas in humans. The ability of EBV to convert human B cells into long-lived lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) in vitro requires the collaborative effects of EBNA2 (which hijacks Notch signaling), latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1) (which mimics CD40 signaling), and EBV-encoded nuclear antigen 3A (EBNA3A) and EBNA3C (which inhibit oncogene-induced senescence and apoptosis). However, we recently showed that an LMP1-deleted EBV mutant induces B cell lymphomas in a newly developed cord blood-humanized mouse model that allows EBV-infected B cells to interact with CD4 T cells (the major source of CD40 ligand). Here we examined whether the EBV LMP2A protein, which mimics constitutively active B cell receptor signaling, is required for EBV-induced lymphomas in this model. We find that the deletion of LMP2A delays the onset of EBV-induced lymphomas but does not affect the tumor phenotype or the number of tumors. The simultaneous deletion of both LMP1 and LMP2A results in fewer tumors and a further delay in tumor onset. Nevertheless, the LMP1/LMP2A double mutant induces lymphomas in approximately half of the infected animals. These results indicate that neither LMP1 nor LMP2A is absolutely essential for the ability of EBV to induce B cell lymphomas in the cord blood-humanized mouse model, although the simultaneous loss of both LMP1 and LMP2A decreases the proportion of animals developing tumors and increases the time to tumor onset. Thus, the expression of either LMP1 or LMP2A may be sufficient to promote early-onset EBV-induced tumors in this model. IMPORTANCE EBV causes human lymphomas, but few models are available for dissecting how EBV causes lymphomas in vivo in the context of a host immune response. We recently used a newly developed cord blood-humanized mouse model to show that EBV can cooperate with human CD4 T cells to cause B cell lymphomas even when a major viral transforming protein, LMP1, is deleted. Here we examined whether the EBV protein LMP2A, which mimics B cell receptor signaling, is required for EBV-induced lymphomas in this model. We find that the deletion of LMP2A alone has little effect on the ability of EBV to cause lymphomas but delays tumor onset. The deletion of both LMP1 and LMP2A results in a smaller number of lymphomas in infected animals, with an even more delayed time to tumor onset. These results suggest that LMP1 and LMP2A collaborate to promote early-onset lymphomas in this model, but neither protein is absolutely essential.


2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 349-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Adam ◽  
Irina Bonzheim ◽  
Falko Fend ◽  
Leticia Quintanilla-Martínez

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