Disease-biased and shared characteristics of the immunoglobulin gene repertoires in marginal zone B cell lymphoproliferations

Archive ouverte

Xochelli, Aliki | Bikos, Vasilis | Polychronidou, Eleftheria | Galigalidou, Chrysi | Agathangelidis, Andreas, C | Charlotte, Frédéric | Moschonas, Panagiotis | Davi, Zadie | Colombo, Monica | Roumelioti, Maria | Sutton, Lesley-Ann | Groenen, Patricia | van den Brand, Michiel | Boudjoghra, Myriam, C | Algara, Patricia | Traverse-Glehen, Alexandra | Ferrer, Ana, Juan | Stalika, Evangelia, C | Karypidou, Maria | Kanellis, George | Kalpadakis, Christina | Mollejo, Manuella | Pangalis, Gerasimos | Vlamos, Panayiotis | Amini, Rose-Marie | Pospisilova, Sarka, C | Ponzoni, Maurilio | Anagnostopoulos, Achilles | Giudicelli, Véronique | Lefranc, Marie-Paule | Espinet, Blanca | Panagiotidis, Panagiotis, F | Piris, Miguel Angel | Du, Ming-Qing | Rosenquist, Richard | Papadaki, Theodora | Belessi, Chrysoula, C | Ferrarini, Manlio | Oscier, David | Tzovaras, Dimitrios | Ghia, Paolo, C | Davi, Frederic | Hadzidimitriou, Anastasia, C | Stamatopoulos, Kostas, C

Edité par CCSD ; John Wiley & Sons -

International audience. The B cell receptor immunoglobulin (Ig) gene repertoires of marginal zone (MZ) lymphoproliferations were analyzed in order to obtain insight into their ontogenetic relationships. Our cohort included cases with MZ lymphomas (n = 488), i.e. splenic (SMZL), nodal (NMZL) and extranodal (ENMZL), as well as provisional entities (n = 76), according to the WHO classification. The most striking Ig gene repertoire skewing was observed in SMZL. However, restrictions were also identified in all other MZ lymphomas studied, particularly ENMZL, with significantly different Ig gene distributions depending on the primary site of involvement. Cross-entity comparisons of the MZ Ig sequence dataset with a large dataset of Ig sequences (MZ-related or not; n = 65 837) revealed four major clusters of cases sharing homologous ('public') heavy variable complementarity-determining region 3. These clusters included rearrangements from SMZL, ENMZL (gastric, salivary gland, ocular adnexa), chronic lymphocytic leukemia, but also rheumatoid factors and non-malignant splenic MZ cells. In conclusion, different MZ lymphomas display biased immunogenetic signatures indicating distinct antigen exposure histories. The existence of rare public stereotypes raises the intriguing possibility that common, pathogen-triggered, immune-mediated mechanisms may result in diverse B lymphoproliferations due to targeting versatile progenitor B cells and/or operating in particular microenvironments. Copyright © 2018 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

No improvement in long-term survival over time for chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients in stereotyped subsets #1 and #2 treated with chemo(immuno)therapy

Archive ouverte | Baliakas, Panagiotis | CCSD

International audience

Different spectra of recurrent gene mutations in subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia harboring stereotyped B-cell receptors

Archive ouverte | Sutton, Lesley-Ann | CCSD

on behalf of ERIC, the European Research Initiative on CLL. International audience. We report on markedly different frequencies of genetic lesions within subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients carrying mut...

Higher-order connections between stereotyped subsets: implications for improved patient classification in CLL

Archive ouverte | Agathangelidis, Andreas | CCSD

International audience. Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by the existence of subsets of patients with (quasi)identical, stereotyped B-cell receptor (BcR) immunoglobulins. Patients in certain major...

Chargement des enrichissements...