Abstract

Although the predominant finding in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is an expansion of monoclonal B lymphocytes, a polyclonal expansion of T cells co-exists in CLL patients. Allogenic stem cell transplants for CLL suggest that a significant graft versus leukaemia effect mediated through recognition of minor MHC or leukaemia specific antigens can be achieved. Since it appears that the immune system and probably T cells recognise CLL cells, it is possible that one or more T cell defects might contribute to the initiation or maintenance of a clone of CLL lymphocytes. PD-1 is a coinhibitory molecule that is expressed on T cells in patients with chronic viral infections. It has been suggested that PD-1 expression might be a marker of cell exhaustion due to antigenic overstimulation. We examined the expression of PD-1 and its naturally occurring ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2 on both B and T cells in patients with CLL and compared this with expression on normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells. We found that PD-1 was expressed on over 10% of CD4+ T cells in 7 of 9 cases of CLL (mean 22±16%) but not on CD4+ T cells in any of 9 normal donors (mean 0±0%), p=0.0009. There was no difference in PD-1 expression on CD8+ or CD14+ PBMCs from CLL patients and normal donors (for CD8+ 24±21% and 19±16% for CLL and normals; for CD14+ 58±16% and 71±31% for CLL and normals). More than 10% of CD5+/19+ CLL cells expressed PD-1 in 7 of 10 cases (mean 18±18%) while more than 10% of normal B cells from 6 of 7 donors also expressed PD-1 (mean 49±30%). We examined the expression of PD-1 on naïve, central memory, effector memory and terminally differentiated subsets of CD4+ cells (CD62L+CD45RA+, CD62L+CD45RA−, CD62L−CD45RA− and CD62L−CD45RA+ respectively) from CLL patients and normal donors. The expression of PD-1 was higher on CD4+ cells from CLL patients in all subsets. The effect was most prominent in the effector memory subset (mean 54±4% for CLL patients versus 26±17% for normal donors, p=0.02). We looked for expression of PD-L1 and PD-L2 on T cells, B cells, monocytes and NK cells from CLL patients and normal donors. PD-L1 was only expressed on monocytes (mean 30±23%) and NK cells (mean 14±19%) from CLL patients and on monocytes from normal donors (mean 35±26%). There was no expression of PD-L2 on any cell type in either CLL patients or normal donors. We conclude that there is increased expression of the co-inhibitory molecule PD-1 on CD4+ T cells in patients with CLL. Ligation of PD-1 by PD-L1 expressed on monocytes or NK cells could inhibit immune responses to tumor and infectious antigens leading to persistence of clonally expanded cells and predisposition to opportunistic pathogens.

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