| Literature DB >> 31537531 |
Daniela Asslaber1,2,3, Yuan Qi1,2,3, Nicole Maeding1,2,3, Markus Steiner1,2,3, Ursula Denk1,2,3, Jan Philip Höpner1,2,3, Tanja Nicole Hartmann1,2,3, Nadja Zaborsky1,2,3, Richard Greil1,2,3, Alexander Egle1,2,3.
Abstract
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a heterogenous disease that is highly dependent on a cross talk of CLL cells with the microenvironment, in particular with T cells. T cells derived from CLL patients or murine CLL models are skewed to an antigen-experienced T-cell subset, indicating a certain degree of antitumor recognition, but they are also exhausted, preventing an effective antitumor immune response. Here we describe a novel mechanism of CLL tumor immune evasion that is independent of T-cell exhaustion, using B-cell-specific deletion of the transcription factor IRF4 (interferon regulatory factor 4) in Tcl-1 transgenic mice developing a murine CLL highly similar to the human disease. We show enhanced CLL disease progression in IRF4-deficient Tcl-1 tg mice, associated with a severe downregulation of genes involved in T-cell activation, including genes involved in antigen processing/presentation and T-cell costimulation, which massively reduced T-cell subset skewing and exhaustion. We found a strong analogy in the human disease, with inferior prognosis of CLL patients with low IRF4 expression in independent CLL patient cohorts, failed T-cell skewing to antigen-experienced subsets, decreased costimulation capacity, and downregulation of genes involved in T-cell activation. These results have therapeutic relevance because our findings on molecular mechanisms of immune privilege may be responsible for the failure of immune-therapeutic strategies in CLL and may lead to improved targeting in the future.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31537531 PMCID: PMC6895374 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2019000973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113