Abstract

In follicular lymphoma (FL), surface immunoglobulin (sIg) carries mandatory N-glycosylation sites in the variable regions, inserted during somatic hypermutation. These glycosylation sites are tumor-specific, indicating a critical function in FL. Added glycan unexpectedly terminates at high mannose (Mann) and confers capability for sIg-mediated interaction with local macrophage-expressed DC-SIGN lectin resulting in low-level activation of upstream B-cell receptor signaling responses. Here we show that despite being of low-level, DC-SIGN induces a similar downstream transcriptional response to anti-IgM in primary FL cells, characterized by activation of pathways associated with B-cell survival, proliferation and cell–cell communication. Lectin binding was also able to engage post-transcriptional receptor cross-talk pathways since, like anti-IgM, DC-SIGN down-modulated cell surface expression of CXCR4. Importantly, pre-exposure of a FL-derived cell line expressing sIgM-Mann or primary FL cells to DC-SIGN, which does not block anti-IgM binding, reversibly paralyzed the subsequent Ca2+ response to anti-IgM. These novel findings indicate that modulation of sIg function occurs in FL via lectin binding to acquired mannoses. The B-cell receptor alternative engagement described here provides two advantages to lymphoma cells: (i) activation of signaling, which, albeit of low-level, is sufficient to trigger canonical lymphoma-promoting responses, and (ii) protection from exogenous antigen by paralyzing anti-IgM-induced signaling. Blockade of this alternative engagement could offer a new therapeutic strategy.

Highlights

  • The first step in the development of follicular lymphoma (FL) is the characteristic t(14;18) translocation which occurs in the bone marrow and upregulates anti-apoptotic ­BCL21

  • The clue that surface Ig (sIg) is implicated in pathogenesis is that in FL all the sIg variable regions are structurally modified by insertion of mannose (Mann) residues into the antigen-binding ­sites[4,5]

  • The added glycans terminate at high-mannoses which is very unusual in cell surface molecules and confers an ability to interact with lectins expressed by m­ acrophages[6,7,8,9]

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Summary

Introduction

The first step in the development of follicular lymphoma (FL) is the characteristic t(14;18) translocation which occurs in the bone marrow and upregulates anti-apoptotic ­BCL21. Relatively weak, DC-SIGN-induced signaling engages similar downstream responses in FL cells as anti-IgM. Our previous analysis of upstream signaling demonstrated that DC-SIGN induced weak, but protracted responses compared to anti-IgM in primary FL ­cells[6,8].

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