Abstract

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.

Highlights

  • More than one-third of non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) arise at sites other than lymph nodes, the socalled extranodal lymphomas (Isaacson and Spencer, 1987)

  • The antibody specificity of monoclonal antibodies derived from 13 low- and high-grade MALT-type lymphomas of the stomach, thyroid, salivary gland, and the lung were analyzed by using heterohybridoma technology

  • To get an insight into the pathogenesis of MALT-type lymphomas, it was the aim of the present study to investigate the eventual correlation between two observations made independently with B cell lymphomas in general and MALT lymphomas in particular: The first observation concerns the high frequency of "anti-self" or autoimmune reactivity of immunoglobulins secreted both by nodal lymphomas like CLL and follicular B cell lymphomas as well as by lymphomas of MALT (Hussell et al, 1993; Greiner et al, 1994a)

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Summary

Introduction

More than one-third of non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) arise at sites other than lymph nodes, the socalled extranodal lymphomas (Isaacson and Spencer, 1987). They are almost all of B cell origin and emerge preferentially in the stomach, an organ primarily devoid of preexisting mucosa-associated lymphoid

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