| Literature DB >> 35804862 |
Eva Hoferkova1,2,3, Sona Kadakova1, Marek Mraz1,2.
Abstract
T cells are key components in environments that support chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), activating CLL-cell proliferation and survival. Here, we review in vitro and in vivo model systems that mimic CLL-T-cell interactions, since these are critical for CLL-cell division and resistance to some types of therapy (such as DNA-damaging drugs or BH3-mimetic venetoclax). We discuss approaches for direct CLL-cell co-culture with autologous T cells, models utilizing supportive cell lines engineered to express T-cell factors (such as CD40L) or stimulating CLL cells with combinations of recombinant factors (CD40L, interleukins IL4 or IL21, INFγ) and additional B-cell receptor (BCR) activation with anti-IgM antibody. We also summarize strategies for CLL co-transplantation with autologous T cells into immunodeficient mice (NOD/SCID, NSG, NOG) to generate patient-derived xenografts (PDX) and the role of T cells in transgenic CLL mouse models based on TCL1 overexpression (Eµ-TCL1). We further discuss how these in vitro and in vivo models could be used to test drugs to uncover the effects of targeted therapies (such as inhibitors of BTK, PI3K, SYK, AKT, MEK, CDKs, BCL2, and proteasome) or chemotherapy (fludarabine and bendamustine) on CLL-T-cell interactions and CLL proliferation.Entities:
Keywords: B cells; CD40L; Eμ-TCL1; IL-21; IL-4; T cells; chronic lymphocytic leukemia; co-culture; fludarabine; ibrutinib; interactions; interleukin; microenvironment; models; therapy resistance; venetoclax; xenograft
Year: 2022 PMID: 35804862 PMCID: PMC9264798 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14133087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Microenvironmental signals provided by various T-cell subsets and other cell types in immune niches.
In vitro models utilizing co-culture of CLL cells with primary T cells.
| Stimulatory T Cells | T:CLL Cells | Duration [Days] | Purification | CLL | CLL Proliferation | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| irradiated autologous/allogenic | - | 3 (up to 9) | CLL | ~100% | [3H]TdR uptake, proliferation | [ |
| autologous activated CD3+ T cells | 1:3 | 14 | CLL | 5–20% | - | [ |
| autologous activated CD3+ T cells | 1:4 | 4–6 | PBMCs CD3-depleted | not affected | CSFE highly variable; absolute increase in number of CD19+ cells | [ |
| autologous non-activated T cells | same as in original PBMCs | 7 | PBMCs | ~75% (~50% *) | - | [ |
| autologous T cells and CD40L- | - | 54–154 | PBMCs | - | Ki67 (significantly increased | [ |
| autologous activated CD4+ T cells | 1:5 | 2–6 | CLL | - | Ki67 (day 2; 2% vs. 1% in control), | [ |
| autologous activated T cells | 2:1 | 1 or 3 h | CLL | - | - | [ |
* Results from control CLL samples cultured at standard conditions are in brackets.
In vitro models utilizing co-culture of CLL cells with engineered supportive cell lines and soluble factors.
| Stimulatory Cells | Stimulatory Soluble Factors | Duration | Purification | CLL Viability | CLL Proliferation | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| irradiated mouse | anti-CD40 mAb (0.5 µg/mL), | 10 | CLL | [3H]TdR uptake 10× higher | [ | |
| CDw32 L cells | anti-CD40 moAb (0.5 µg/mL), | 3 (up to 9) | CLL | ~80% (~50% *) | weak [3H]TdR uptake compared to healthy B cells | [ |
| non-irradiated 3T40L cell line | a confluent layer of 3T40L | 3 | ? | 89% (71% *) | - | [ |
| irradiated 3T40L cell line | 1:17 (3T40L:B cells) | 3 | CLL | 77% (32% *) | - | [ |
| 3T40L cell line | - | 1–3 | PBMCs/ | upregulation of genes promoting CLL-cell survival and cell-cycle arrest | [ | |
| irradiated 3T40L cell line | IL4 (20 ng/mL) | 6 | CLL | 35% (55% *) | cell cycle (6% cells in S-phase vs. 3% in control); [3H]TdR uptake | [ |
| allogenic human bone marrow | CD40L (1 μg/mL), | 3.5 | CLL | 35–75% | BrdU cell cycle (proliferation induced in 8 of 21 samples); ~4% of cells in S+G2/M phase (DAPI staining) | [ |
| irradiated 3T40L cell line | CpG (1.5 μg/mL) | 3 | PBMCs |
75% (IGHV unmut.), | CSFE (proliferation in 80% IGHV unmutated CLL, | [ |
| mouse fibroblasts expressing CD31 | IL4 (5 ng/mL) | 7 | PBMCs | 60% (30% *) | CSFE; 4–10% Ki67+ cells | [ |
| mouse fibroblasts expressing CD40L | IL4 (5 ng/mL) | 7 | PBMCs | 50% (30% *) | CSFE; 8–14% Ki67+ cells | [ |
| 3T40L cell line | IL21 (25 ng/mL) | 5 | CLL | ~80% (~30% *) | CSFE (~50% divided cells, ~20% w/o IL21); Ki67 | [ |
| non-irradiated human-bone-marrow stromal (BMSC) cell line UE6E7T-2 | CD40L (1 μg/mL), CpG (1.5 μg/mL), | 3 | PBMCs | 25% (48% *); | ↑ S phase; 11% Ki67+ cells (1.18%); | [ |
| irradiated mouse L cells | IL21 (12.5 ng/mL) | 9–10 | CLL | 94% at day 5 | CSFE (proliferation of 49% cells; | [ |
| non-irradiated human BMSC | CD40L (1 μg/mL), CpG (1.5 μg/mL), | 2 | PMBCs | 137% (100% *) | 7% Ki67+ cells | [ |
| 3T40L cell line | IL21 (25 ng/mL) | 5 | PBMCs | as control (~90% *) | CSFE (increased division ~10× compared to control) | [ |
| HS5 cell line | IL2 (50 ng/mL), CpG (1 µg/mL) | 4 | PBMCs | 70% (82% *) | CSFE (proliferation of 30% cells) | [ |
| BMF cell line # | CpG (2 µg/mL), IL15 (10 ng/mL) | 7 | CLL | - | CSFE (several generations); Ki67 | [ |
* Results from control CLL samples cultured at standard conditions are in brackets. # Generated from a long-term culture of bone marrow cells from a CLL patient. ↑ means an increase in percentage of cells in the given cell cycle phase
In vitro models utilizing CLL-cell stimulation with recombinant factors.
| Recombinant Factor (Concentration) | Duration in Days | Purification | CLL Viability | CLL Proliferation | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| trimeric anti-CD40L moAb, IL4 (20 ng/mL) | 4 | PBMCs | - | [3H]TdR uptake (56% of cells with a high rate | [ |
| trimeric anti-CD40L moAb (0.5 μg/mL) | 3 | PBMCs | 55% (22% *) | cell cycle (5.3% of proliferating cells); | [ |
| IL4 (2 ng/mL), CD40L plus enhancer (100 ng/mL) | 7 | CLL | ~80% (40–80% *) | - | [ |
| CD40L or anti-CD40 moAb, IL4 (10 ng/mL), IL21 (20 ng/mL) | 1.6 | PBMCs | - | [3H]TdR uptake; BrdU cell cycle, | [ |
| CpG (5 μg/mL), IL21 (50 ng/mL) | 2.3 | CLL | no difference from control | [3H]TdR uptake, significantly increased proliferation with addition of IL21 | [ |
| histidine-tagged CD40L (50 ng/mL), anti-polyhistidin mAb (5 μg/mL), | 7 | CLL | differentiation into antibody-producing cells | [ | |
| IL15 (15 ng/mL), CpG (1.5 μg/mL) | 6 | CLL | 60–80% | CSFE (~70% divided cells) | [ |
| IL15 (15 ng/mL), CpG (1.5 μg/mL) | 5 | PBMCs | <5% difference from control | CSFE (significantly increased cell division) | [ |
| anti-IgM (10 µg/mL), trimeric CD40L (100 ng/mL), IL4 (10 ng/mL), and IL21 (25 ng/mL) | 6 | CLL | - | CSFE (41% of CLL samples proliferating) | [ |
* In the brackets are results from control CLL samples cultured in standard conditions.
Figure 2Effects of CD40 pathway on drug responses in CLL cells [21,23,34,42,60,62,63,67,78,85,86,87,88,89,90,91,92,93,94,95,96].
Figure 3Transgenic mouse models exploring the role of CLL–T-cell interactions [131,133,134,135].
Figure 4Murine models revealing role of T cells in CLL biology. BM = bone marrow, CSFE = carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester, PBMC = peripheral blood mononuclear cells [140,141,142,143,144,145,146].