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Adaptive T-cell immunity controls senescence-prone MyD88- or CARD11-mutant B-cell lymphomas
Author(s) -
Maurice Reimann,
Jens Schrezenmeier,
Paulina RichterPechańska,
Anna Dolnik,
Timon Hick,
Kolja Schleich,
Xiurong Cai,
Dorothy Ngo-Yin Fan,
Philipp Lohneis,
Sven Maßwig,
Sophy Denker,
Antonia Busse,
Gero Knittel,
Ruth Flümann,
Dorothee Childs,
Liam Childs,
Ana-Maria Gätjens-Sanchez,
Lars Bullinger,
Andreas Rosenwald,
Hans Christian Reinhardt,
Clemens A. Schmitt
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2020005244
Subject(s) - biology , cancer research , lymphoma , microbiology and biotechnology , immunology
Aberrant B-cell receptor/NF-κB signaling is a hallmark feature of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, especially in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Recurrent mutations in this cascade, for example, in CD79B, CARD11, or NFKBIZ, and also in the Toll-like receptor pathway transducer MyD88, all deregulate NF-κB, but their differential impact on lymphoma development and biology remains to be determined. Here, we functionally investigate primary mouse lymphomas that formed in recipient mice of Eµ-myc transgenic hematopoietic stem cells stably transduced with naturally occurring NF-κB mutants. Although most mutants supported Myc-driven lymphoma formation through repressed apoptosis, CARD11- or MyD88-mutant lymphoma cells selectively presented with a macrophage-activating secretion profile, which, in turn, strongly enforced transforming growth factor β (TGF-β)-mediated senescence in the lymphoma cell compartment. However, MyD88- or CARD11-mutant Eµ-myc lymphomas exhibited high-level expression of the immune-checkpoint mediator programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1), thus preventing their efficient clearance by adaptive host immunity. Conversely, these mutant-specific dependencies were therapeutically exploitable by anti–programmed cell death 1 checkpoint blockade, leading to direct T-cell–mediated lysis of predominantly but not exclusively senescent lymphoma cells. Importantly, mouse-based mutant MyD88- and CARD11-derived signatures marked DLBCL subgroups exhibiting mirroring phenotypes with respect to the triad of senescence induction, macrophage attraction, and evasion of cytotoxic T-cell immunity. Complementing genomic subclassification approaches, our functional, cross-species investigation unveils pathogenic principles and therapeutic vulnerabilities applicable to and testable in human DLBCL subsets that may inform future personalized treatment strategies.

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