Literature DB >> 11594563

Cutaneous T cell lymphoma: the helping hand of dendritic cells.

R L Edelson1.   

Abstract

Since its introduction 25 years ago, cutaneous T cell lymphoma has become the preferred designation for clonal malignancies of those CD4 thymus-derived lymphocytes ("cutaneous T cells") that preferentially migrate to skin. The varied cutaneous clinical presentations, dependent on the specific features of the dominant subclones of the malignant lymphocytes, historically led to confusing descriptive terms (mycosis fungoides, Sézary syndrome, lymphoma cutis, leukemia cutis, reticulum cell sarcoma of the skin). Recognition that all of these clinical presentations are cancers of a single type of cell has permitted their unification under the single, clarified heading cutaneous T cell lymphoma, or CTCL. As a neoplastic amplification of the skin-homing T cells from which it is derived, CTCL's distinctive features can be explained. The triad of skin localization, remarkable avoidance of bone marrow, often even in the context of extremely high leukemic counts, and infiltration of perifollicular T cell zones of the lymph nodes and spleen reflect the migratory pathway and homing patterns of cutaneous T cells. The usually retained levels of serum immunoglobulins and the resulting capacity to defend against encapsulated bacteria, often even in advanced CTCL, are manifestations of the helper function of the malignant T cells-that is, their functional capacity to stimulate B lymphocytes to produce immunoglobulin in a polyclonal manner. In contrast, the often-extreme normal T cell deficits in advanced CTCL, equivalent to those of late-stage AIDS, probably resulting from the production of suppressive cytokines such as IL-10, cause susceptibility to a broad range of opportunistic infections, the most common direct cause of death. Pautrier microabscesses, the pathognomonic feature of epidermotropic early CTCL, hold the clues to the pathogenesis of the cancer. These intraepidermal collections of stimulated and proliferating malignant cells, adherent to the dendrites of intraepidermal dendritic antigen-presenting cells (Langerhans' cells [LCs]), indicate a dynamic communication between the two cell types. Since CTCL cells are derived from CD4 T cells, which normally receive signaling from dendritic cells (DCs) via presentation of antigenic peptides as part of class II major histocompatibility complexes to antigen-specific T cell receptors (TCRs), it seems likely that CTCL is a clonal proliferation of T cells responding to specific antigenic stimulation from LCs. This is supported by our recent finding that CTCL cells proliferate in vitro in response to TCR stimulation by autologous DCs, which have previously ingested and processed antigens from apoptotic autologous CTCL cells. In short, CTCL may be a malignancy of T cells stimulated to proliferate against its own tumor antigens. The most intriguing possibility is that a yet-unidentified transforming retrovirus, harbored by LCs, simultaneously attracts, stimulates, and transforms a single clone of antigen-specific cutaneous T cells. Longstanding disease-free remissions have been induced by transimmunization (via a photopheresis apparatus). This treatment, introduced more than a decade ago by our group and the first and still the only FDA-approved selective anticancer immunotherapy, has been performed more than 200,000 times worldwide on advanced CTCL, as well as in reversal/prevention of heart transplant rejection and treatment of graft-versus-host disease and selected autoimmune disorders. Transimmunization induces clinically relevant suppression, and occasionally elimination, of pathogenic T cell clones. The common denominator between these diverse groups of responding patients is the presence of clonally distinctive TCRs on the disease-causing malignant or autoaggressive T cell clones. In CTCL at least one source of tumor-specific antigens is derived from the clone-specific (idiotypic) segments of the TCR protein chains. In the photopheresis apparatus, two synergistic phenomena are initiated: induction of apoptosis of the CTCL cells and mass conversion of blood monocytes to DCs. The young DCs then ingest the apoptotic CTCL cells, process and present the CTCL antigens to responding anti-CTCL cytotoxic T cells, and stimulate clinically important CTCL suppression. Now that it is better understood, transimmunization may have much broader applications in other types of cancer as well.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11594563

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  24 in total

1.  Density of neoplastic lymphoid infiltrate, CD8+ T cells, and CD1a+ dendritic cells in mycosis fungoides.

Authors:  G Goteri; A Filosa; B Mannello; D Stramazzotti; S Rupoli; P Leoni; G Fabris
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 3.411

Review 2.  Signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signalling and T-cell lymphomas.

Authors:  Tracey J Mitchell; Susan John
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 7.397

3.  Nonmalignant T cells stimulate growth of T-cell lymphoma cells in the presence of bacterial toxins.

Authors:  Anders Woetmann; Paola Lovato; Karsten W Eriksen; Thorbjørn Krejsgaard; Tord Labuda; Qian Zhang; Anne-Merethe Mathiesen; Carsten Geisler; Arne Svejgaard; Mariusz A Wasik; Niels Ødum
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2006-12-19       Impact factor: 22.113

4.  Interleukin-16 as a marker of Sézary syndrome onset and stage.

Authors:  Jillian Richmond; Marina Tuzova; Ashley Parks; Natalie Adams; Elizabeth Martin; Marianne Tawa; Lynne Morrison; Keri Chaney; Thomas S Kupper; Clara Curiel-Lewandrowski; William Cruikshank
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2010-09-28       Impact factor: 8.317

Review 5.  Evolving insights in the pathogenesis and therapy of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (mycosis fungoides and Sezary syndrome).

Authors:  Henry K Wong; Anjali Mishra; Timothy Hake; Pierluigi Porcu
Journal:  Br J Haematol       Date:  2011-08-25       Impact factor: 6.998

6.  Clinical analysis of 84 cases of erythrodermic psoriasis and 121 cases of other types of erythroderma from 2010-2015.

Authors:  Ping Zhang; Hong-Xiang Chen; Jian-Jun Xing; Zhao Jin; Feng Hu; Teng-Long Li; Xiao-Yong Zhou
Journal:  J Huazhong Univ Sci Technolog Med Sci       Date:  2017-08-08

Review 7.  Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma: Biologic targets for therapy.

Authors:  Jaehyuk Choi; Francine Foss
Journal:  Curr Hematol Malig Rep       Date:  2007-10       Impact factor: 3.952

Review 8.  Immunopathogenesis and therapy of cutaneous T cell lymphoma.

Authors:  Ellen J Kim; Stephen Hess; Stephen K Richardson; Sara Newton; Louise C Showe; Bernice M Benoit; Ravi Ubriani; Carmela C Vittorio; Jacqueline M Junkins-Hopkins; Maria Wysocka; Alain H Rook
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 14.808

9.  In vitro treatment of monocytes with 8-methoxypsolaren and ultraviolet A light induces dendritic cells with a tolerogenic phenotype.

Authors:  A Legitimo; R Consolini; A Failli; S Fabiano; W Bencivelli; F Scatena; F Mosca
Journal:  Clin Exp Immunol       Date:  2007-03-26       Impact factor: 4.330

10.  Ectopic expression of B-lymphoid kinase in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma.

Authors:  Thorbjørn Krejsgaard; Claudia S Vetter-Kauczok; Anders Woetmann; Hermann Kneitz; Karsten W Eriksen; Paola Lovato; Qian Zhang; Mariusz A Wasik; Carsten Geisler; Elisabeth Ralfkiaer; Juergen C Becker; Niels Ødum
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2009-04-07       Impact factor: 22.113

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