| Literature DB >> 35149845 |
Alicia M Vaca1, Nikolaos Ioannou2, Mariela Sivina1, Elisavet Vlachonikola3, Karen Clise-Dwyer4, Ekaterina Kim1, Dan Li4, Qing Ma4, Alessandra Ferrajoli1, Zeev Estrov1, William G Wierda1, Piers E M Patten2, Alan G Ramsay2, Jan A Burger5.
Abstract
Interactions between chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells and T-cell subsets in the lymph node microenvironment are thought to play a central role in disease biology. To study these interactions in a model of the CLL lymph node microenvironment, we characterized T-cell subsets in CLL nurselike cell (NLC) co-cultures. We focused on T-follicular helper (Tfh) cells, which are characterized by CXCR5 expression and localization to B-cell follicles. In co-cultures from 28 different CLL patients, we detected an expansion of Tfh cells based on PD-1, BCL6, and ICOS expression, with increased IL-21 and downmodulated CD40L surface expression. Regulatory T cells (Treg), which promote immune tolerance, also expanded in NLC co-cultures. T-cell receptor (TR) gene repertoire analyses confirmed the clonal expansion of CD4+ T cells, with an enrichment of TR clonotypes commonly expanded also in primary CLL samples. Multicolor confocal microscopy revealed that Tfh, but not Treg co-localize with proliferating CLL cells in CLL lymph node sections. Collectively, these data provide new insight into the cellular and molecular cross-talk between CLL and T-cell subsets, resulting in clonal expansion of T-helper cells and interaction of Tfh cells with proliferating CLL cells which may open new avenues for therapeutic targeting.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35149845 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-022-01519-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528