Collapse of the CD27+ B-Cell Compartment Associated with Systemic Plasmacytosis in Patients with Advanced Melanoma and Other Cancers
Purpose: Disturbed peripheral blood B-cell homeostasis complicates certain infections and autoimmune diseases, such as HIV and systemic lupus erythematosus, but has not been reported in cancer. This study aimed to investigate whether B-cell physiology was altered in the presence of melanoma and othe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2009-07, Vol.15 (13), p.4277-4287 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose: Disturbed peripheral blood B-cell homeostasis complicates certain infections and autoimmune diseases, such as HIV and systemic
lupus erythematosus, but has not been reported in cancer. This study aimed to investigate whether B-cell physiology was altered
in the presence of melanoma and other cancers.
Experimental Design: Flow cytometry was used to identify phenotypic differences in B cells from patients with melanoma and normal donors. In vitro stimulated B cells were assessed for responsiveness and also used as stimulators of allogeneic T cells in mixed lymphocyte
reactions.
Results: We show B-cell dysregulation in patients with advanced melanoma ( n = 26) and other solid tumors ( n = 13), marked by a relative and absolute loss of CD27+ (memory) B cells and associated with an aberrant systemic plasmacytosis.
Functionally, B cells from patients with melanoma inefficiently up-regulated immunoregulatory molecules and weakly secreted
cytokines in response to CD40 and toll-like receptor 9 agonists. Stimulated B cells from patients induced proliferation of
alloreactive CD4+ T cells, but these T cells poorly secreted IFNγ and interleukin-2. These effects were recapitulated by using
purified normal donor CD27 neg B cells in these same assays, linking the predominance of CD27 neg B cells in patients with the observed functional hyporesponsiveness. Indeed, B-cell dysfunction in patients strongly correlated
with the extent of loss of CD27+ B cells in peripheral blood.
Conclusions: Disturbed B-cell homeostasis is a previously unrecognized feature of patients with advanced melanoma and other cancers and
may represent an unanticipated mechanism of immune incompetence in cancer. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-09-0537 |