| Literature DB >> 27542958 |
Andrea Haerzschel1,2,3, Julie Catusse1, Evelyn Hutterer2,3, Manuela Paunovic2,3, Katja Zirlik1, Hermann Eibel4,5, Peter W Krenn2,3, Tanja N Hartmann6,7, Meike Burger1,8.
Abstract
Dysregulation of B cell receptor (BCR) signalling is a hallmark of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) pathology, and targeting BCR pathway kinases has brought great therapeutic advances. Activation of the BCR in lymphoid organs has been associated with CLL cell proliferation and survival, leading to progressive disease. While these responses are mediated predominantly by IgM, the role of IgD is less clear. Seeking to uncover downstream consequences of individual and combined stimulation of the two BCR isotypes, we found an amplification of IgD expression and IgD-mediated calcium signalling by previous stimulation of IgM in CLL. Furthermore, no heterologous downmodulation of the isotypes, as observed in healthy donors, was present. Only marginal downregulation of the expression of various chemokine receptors by α-IgM and α-IgD stimulation was found as compared to normal B cells. Consistently, calcium responses of CLL cells to different chemokines were only weakly affected by preceding BCR activation. In contrast, migration towards the two homeostatic chemokines CXCL12 and CCL21 was differentially regulated by IgM and IgD. While IgM activation reduced migration of CLL cells towards CXCL12, but not CCL21, IgD activation predominantly impacted on CCL21 but not CXCL12-mediated chemotaxis. This indicates that the preference for one chemokine over the other may depend on the functional presence of the two isotypes in CLL. Inhibitors against the kinases Syk, Lyn, and Btk antagonised both BCR- and chemokine-induced calcium signals.Entities:
Keywords: BCR signalling; CLL; Chemokines; IgD; IgM
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27542958 PMCID: PMC5093209 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-016-2788-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
Fig. 1IgM- and IgD-mediated calcium mobilisation in CLL. a Surface expression of IgM and IgD was determined by flow cytometry (n = 36). A logarithmic scale is used due to the high inter-patient variation. b CLL cells were prestimulated by α-IgM or α-IgD antibodies (20 μg/ml) for 24 h, and calcium mobilisation upon a second BCR stimulation was measured by flow cytometry (n = 16). Exemplary fluorescence courses are given in bii. The arrows indicate the time of stimulation
Fig. 2Modulation of BCR surface expression by BCR activation. a IgD and b IgM surface expression was measured by flow cytometry upon BCR activation by 20 μg/ml α-IgM and α-IgD antibodies for 24 h, compared to the appropriate negative control F(ab’)2 in CLL (n = 10) and healthy B cells (n = 3)
Fig. 3Regulation of chemokine receptors by BCR activation. Surface expression of a CXCR4, b CCR7, c CXCR5, and d CCRL2 was measured on CLL (n = 19) and healthy donor-derived (n = 5) B cells after 24-h stimulation with soluble α-IgM and α-IgD (20 μg/ml) antibodies. e CXCR4 expression after 24-h stimulation with immobilised α-IgM and α-IgD (20 μg/ml) was assessed on CLL (n = 10) and healthy B cells (n = 4). In all experiments, controls were incubated for the same amount of time with the appropriate negative control F(ab’)2
Fig. 4Calcium mobilisation in response to chemokines. CLL cells (n = 16) were incubated for 24 h with soluble α-IgM or α-IgD antibodies. Calcium mobilisation was induced by the chemokines CXCL13 (500 ng/ml), CCL21 (200 ng/ml), and CCL19 (200 ng/ml) and determined using the Fluo-3 dye as described in materials and methods. The lower panels show representative examples for the kinetics of Fluo-3 fluorescence. The arrows indicate the time at which the chemokine was added
Fig. 5Regulation of chemotaxis by BCR activation. Boyden chamber migration assays were performed towards CXCL12 (100 ng/ml; n = 8) and CCL21 (200 ng/ml; n = 7) after 24-h stimulation with α-IgM, α-IgD, or both (10 μg/ml). Cells were allowed to migrate for 2 h and subsequently stained for CD19/CD5 and for viability using Annexin-V-FITC and 7AAD. Only Annexin/7AAD double-negative and CD19/CD5 double-positive cells were counted. All experiments were performed as duplicates; results are shown as the percentage of input cells
Fig. 6Impact of kinase inhibitors on BCR- and chemokine-mediated calcium mobilisation. Calcium mobilisation of CLL cells in response to α-IgM (10 μg/ml), α-IgD (10 μg/ml), CXCL13 (500 ng/ml), CCL21 (200 ng/ml), and CCL19 (200 ng/ml) was assessed as described. After loading with Fluo-3-AM, cells were additionally incubated for 30 min with 5 μM Bafetinib, Ibrutinib, R406, or an equal volume DMSO as a control (n = 11)