CD40 ligand and autoantigen are involved in the pathogenesis of low-grade B-cell lymphomas of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue

Low-grade MALT-type lymphomas are malignancies of mucosal marginal-zone B cells and preceded by reactive inflammatory lymphoid tissue. Experimental observations suggest that antigen and CD40 Ligand act during cognate T/B cell interaction and are crucial for germinal center B-cell maturation generati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical & developmental immunology 1998, Vol.6 (3-4), p.187-196
Hauptverfasser: Greiner, A, Knörr, C, Qin, Y, Schultz, A, Marx, A, Kroczek, R A, Müller-Hermelink, H K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Low-grade MALT-type lymphomas are malignancies of mucosal marginal-zone B cells and preceded by reactive inflammatory lymphoid tissue. Experimental observations suggest that antigen and CD40 Ligand act during cognate T/B cell interaction and are crucial for germinal center B-cell maturation generating marginal-zone B cells. To investigate the mechanisms underlying the development of extranodal MALT-type lymphomas, the immunoglobulin receptor was sequenced and analyzed for antigen specificity using heterohybridoma technology. Furthermore, CD40 ligand expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry and by semiquantitative RT-PCR, and ligand binding to the CD40 of tumor B cells was studied using the CD40 system. Hypermutations were found in low-grade lymphomas throughout CDR1-CDR3 suggestive of positive selection through their antigen receptor. Different VH families were used and more than 69% of tumor immunoglobulins bound different mucosal antigens. CD40L expression was found in the tumor marginal zone in substantial amounts. The in vitro proliferation response of all low-grade MALT-type lymphomas was dependent on anti-CD40-mediated signals and cytokines. Our data provide evidence that autoantigen as well as the CD40L expressed by activated nonneoplastic T cells may drive the evolution of low-grade MALT-type lymphomas either directly or by paracrine mechanisms and that antigen may contribute to lymphoma pathogenesis.
ISSN:1044-6672
2314-8861
1740-2522
2314-7156
1740-2530
DOI:10.1155/1998/18679