|
||
Brief Definitive Report |
rkuppers{at}mac.genetik.uni-koeln.de
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key Words: CD95 (Apo-1/Fas) germinal center B lymphocytes somatic hypermutation apoptosis
The CD95 (Apo-1/Fas) gene was recently proposed to act as a tumor suppressor gene 5 and is, like bcl-6, mutated in a fraction of lymphomas derived from antigen-experienced B cells. In the B lineage, CD95 is specifically expressed at the GC stage of differentiation 67 and may contribute to the propensity of GC B cells to apoptosis. Occupancy of CD95 by CD95 ligand was therefore proposed to represent an important mechanism for negative selection of (e.g., autoreactive) B cells within the GC 7891011. Although autoreactive B cells can bypass negative selection in CD95-deficient lpr mice 12, affinity maturation on the basis of positive selection by antigen appeared to remain undisturbed 6. lpr mice develop lymphadenopathy and enlargement of liver and spleen and are prone to autoimmunity 12 and B cell lymphoma 13. Germline mutations of the CD95 gene leading to autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) and predisposing to B cell lymphoma and other malignancies have been observed in humans as well 514. Notably, the majority of these patients develop follicular hyperplasia and progressive transformation of GCs, leading to profound alterations of the normal GC architecture 15.
Somatic mutations impairing the transduction of the apoptosis signal were observed in a number of lymphoid malignancies 1617. Deleterious mutations of exon IX of the CD95 gene coding for the death domain (DD) act in a dominant-negative way, which is likely due to the trimerization of CD95 on the cell surface 14. The DD is a highly conserved region that is required and sufficient for the transduction of the death signal 14.
During tumor progression, malignant cells frequently lose their susceptibility to CD95-mediated apoptosis and thus escape immunosurveillance and rejection (e.g., by CD95 ligand expressing cytotoxic T cells; for review see reference 18). In consequence, loss of CD95 function due to somatic mutations should favor immune evasion of malignant cells.
In lymphomas derived from antigen-experienced B cells, mutations of the CD95 gene may reflect increased mutability due to the malignant transformation and defective DNA repair pathways in the neoplastic cells. On the other hand, such mutations may have been acquired by the precursor cell of the tumor clone during the GC reaction. To test the latter possibility, naive, GC, and memory B cells of healthy donors were purified and analyzed for mutations of the CD95 gene.
Cloning Procedure.
Single-Cell PCR.
As depicted in Fig. 1, two regions of the CD95 gene were analyzed by single-cell PCR. Exon IX coding for the DD was amplified using 5'-CAC TAA TGG GAA TTT CAT TTA GA-3' as external forward, 5'-TGG GAA TTT CAT TTA GAA AAA CA-3' as internal forward, 5'-TAA TTG CAT ATA CTC AGA ACT GA-3' as external reverse, and 5'-TAC TCA GAA CTG AAT TTG TTG T-3' as internal reverse primers in a nested PCR (two amplification rounds of 35 and 45 cycles at an annealing temperature of 55°C). A 750-bp fragment encompassing the 5' region of the CD95 gene (Fig. 1) was amplified using 5'-ACC ACC GGG GCT TTT CGT GA-3' as external forward, 5'-TGA GCT CGT CTC TGA TCT CG-3' as internal forward, 5'-TAT CTG TTC TGA AGG CTG CAG-3' as external reverse, and 5'-CGG AGC GGA CCT TTG GCT-3' as internal reverse primers in a nested PCR at an annealing temperature of 58°C. Sequence analysis for cases II and III revealed that the somatic mutations within the 5' region of the CD95 gene clustered to a genomic region flanking the first exon. Thus, further analysis focused on a 510-bp region using 5'-CTT CGC ATC AAG GCC CAA GAA-3' and 5'-AAG GCC CAA GAA AAG CAA GTC-3' as external and internal reverse primers, respectively. PCR products were gel purified and directly sequenced using the BigDye Terminator cycle sequencing kit and an automated sequencer (ABI 377; Applied Biosystems). To rule out Taq DNA polymerase errors during the first and second rounds of PCR, 10 CD95 mutations were reproduced by amplification of the respective PCR products from two independent aliquots of the whole genome preamplification reactions.
![]()
Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Somatic hypermutation is a critical mechanism for the generation of diversity in the antibody repertoire 1. This process takes place in antigen-experienced B cells within the germinal center (GC), presumably the so-called centroblasts, and specifically targets rearranged Ig genes. The average mutation frequency of Ig VH genes in normal human centroblasts is
6 x 10–2 per basepair 2. Despite its high specificity for rearranged Ig genes, the somatic hypermutation machinery was also shown to target the bcl-6 gene in normal GC B cells 34. Accordingly, (post) GC B cell–derived lymphomas also frequently harbor somatic bcl-6 mutations 4.
![]()
Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Cell Separation and Flow Cytometry.
For single-cell analysis, B cell subsets were purified from reactive tonsils of seven donors (aged from 3 to 41 y). CD38+CD77+ GC B cells were isolated as previously described 19. Repeating the MACSTM enrichment of CD77+ cells once, a purity of >90% CD38+CD77+ cells was obtained. From six donors, single CD38+CD77+ cells were sorted directly into PCR tubes containing 20 µl of 1x Expand High Fidelity PCR buffer (Boehringer Mannheim) on a FACS® 440 (Becton Dickinson). Tonsillar naive and memory B cells were isolated from the flowthrough fraction (CD77– cells). The fraction of naive B cells was twice depleted from CD27-expressing cells, whereas the memory B cell fraction was twice enriched for CD27 expression by MACSTM. Naive B cells (IgD+ IgM+CD20+CD27–) and memory B cells (IgD–IgM–Ig
+ CD27+) were then directly sorted into PCR tubes.
For an initial experiment, genomic DNA was extracted from naive (IgD+CD27–) and GC (CD38+ CD77+) B cells purified from tonsillar tissue of another donor 20 and used for amplification of exon IX of the CD95 gene using Pfu Turbo polymerase (Stratagene) in 35 PCR cycles and cloned into the pGEM-T cloning vector.
For all sorted cells, a whole genome preamplification step 21 was performed. Aliquots of 4 µl from these reactions were then subjected to two rounds of seminested PCR amplification as previously described. In brief, rearranged VH genes were amplified using family-specific framework region I V gene primers and two sets of JH primers in a seminested approach 19.
|
|
2 test for rows and columns of contingency tables. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. | Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
+CD27+) B cells from six further donors. The single-cell approach was chosen because direct sequencing of PCR products from single cells circumvents DNA polymerase–introduced mutations, which might pose a problem in a low-level mutation analysis when PCR products are cloned before sequencing. For each B cell subset, single cells were isolated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting from reactive tonsils of six donors (aged 3–41 y). From these cells, a 750-bp fragment of the CD95 gene encompassing 5' untranslated and coding regions of exon I and a p53 responsive enhancer within the first intron was analyzed. This region (here collectively termed 5' region [5'R]; Fig. 1) is located
100 bp downstream of the transcription initiation site and was selected in analogy to the bcl-6 gene that was previously shown to harbor a major cluster of somatic mutations within its 5' regulatory regions 4. In addition, a 440-bp fragment comprising exon IX coding for the DD of CD95 was analyzed (Fig. 1). The purity of the sorted B cell subsets was verified by amplification and sequencing of Ig VH gene rearrangements from 8 naive B cells (none mutated), 21 GC B cells (all mutated), and 16 memory B cells (all mutated; Table ).
|
Notably, somatic mutations of the 5'R of the CD95 gene were detected in
15% of GC and memory B cells (Table ). Assuming that also in the noninformative cases on average 1.6 alleles of the CD95 gene were amplified from each cell, an overall mutation frequency of the 5'R in GC and memory B cells of 2.6 x 10–4 per basepair can be calculated. In contrast, in a total of 48 naive B cells, only one mutation within the 5'R was detected (Table ). As none of the 22 mutations within the 5'R (Table ) targeted the first exon or the p53-responsive enhancer (Fig. 1), their functional relevance remains unclear. Mutations within the DD were very rare and only found in GC B cells (mutation frequency in GC B cells 7 x 10–5 per basepair).
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Somatic mutations in rearranged Ig genes and in the bcl-6 gene are largely confined to a genomic region of
1.5 kb downstream of the transcription initiation site. This is compatible with the clustering of CD95 mutations within the 5'R (as opposed to mutations within the DD, i.e., >15 kb downstream of the transcription initiation site). As described for both Ig and bcl-6 genes, a bias for transitions over transversions (26:8) was observed for mutations in the CD95 gene. While somatic mutations are preferentially introduced at RGYW motifs in Ig and bcl-6 genes 4, this was not evident for the 5' region of the CD95 gene. However, as not all RGYW motifs in Ig genes are mutational hot spots, this does not argue against an involvement of the hypermutation machinery (for review see reference 2).
From the finding that somatic mutations in the CD95 gene also occur in T cell–derived malignancies and solid tumors (for review see reference 5), it is obvious that other mechanisms can contribute to CD95 mutations. In line with this view, the pattern of CD95 mutations in T cell malignancies (i.e., large deletions rather than point mutations) clearly differs from that described here. As neither T cell neoplasms nor solid tumors have been analyzed for mutations within the 5'R of the CD95 gene so far, we have amplified and sequenced this region from 48 mostly high grade breast cancer samples and found no mutation (Müschen, M., and D. Re, unpublished observation).
A fraction of somatic CD95 mutations, in particular those within the DD, may indeed have significant impact on the fate of a B cell within the GC. Truncating mutations and also many replacement mutations within the DD have been shown to act in a dominant negative manner and are related to a clinical phenotype (ALPS; for review see reference 5). Using an in vitro selection procedure, this study provides direct evidence for the link between mutations within the DD and resistance to CD95-mediated apoptosis: triggering CD95-mediated apoptosis in vitro resulted in a 10-fold higher frequency of DD mutations in the surviving cells (P < 0.01). That B cells harboring an inactivated CD95 gene are indeed also positively selected within the GC is supported by the finding that all mutated DD sequences from GC B cells carried either replacement or truncating mutations (Table ). The observation that mutations within the 5'R were apparently coselected with DD mutations (Table ) might indicate that the mutations within both regions were generated through the same mechanism, namely somatic hypermutation as it is usually targeted to rearranged Ig genes.
Several lines of evidence suggest that CD95 is important for affinity maturation of B cells during the GC reaction: survival signals through B cell receptor engagement and costimulatory CD40 signaling confer resistance to CD95-mediated apoptosis 91024 and represent a means of positive selection by antigen 111. Hence, CD95 deficiency in GC B cells due to somatic mutation might allow GC B cells expressing mutant antibodies to bypass the stringent selection mechanisms involved in affinity maturation. While an earlier study of affinity maturation of the antibody response to 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenyl (NP) in lpr mice did not support this possibility 6, recent data of Takemori and colleagues, obtained in the same experimental system, indicate that CD95 indeed plays a role in GC B cell selection (Takemori, T., personal communication).
The process of somatic hypermutation is a potential source of self-reactive antibody specificities 1. Therefore, autoreactive B cells are vigorously counterselected within the GC 25. In CD95-deficient lpr mice 12 and humans suffering from ALPS 14, autoreactive B cells producing high levels of autoantibodies accumulate, indicating that negative selection against autoreactivity is impaired 12. In this study, GC B cells that had lost their sensitivity to CD95-mediated apoptosis were detected in five donors at young age (3 to 6 y). Although such mutations were only found at a very low frequency, we can envision that these cells may accumulate during the aging process and represent a potential source for autoantibody production.
Somatic mutations of the CD95 gene were previously found in a number of (post) GC B cell lymphomas including follicular lymphoma, diffuse large B cell lymphoma, anaplastic large cell lymphoma 17, plasmocytoma 16, and Hodgkin's disease 26. The overall frequency of (post) GC B cell lymphomas harboring one or more CD95 mutations is
16% (for review see reference 5). Given that germline mutations of the CD95 gene are related to lymphoproliferation and B cell lymphoma in humans and mice 13, it was proposed that CD95 acts as a tumor suppressor gene 5. As this study describes that normal GC B cells can also acquire somatic mutations of the CD95 gene, it is unlikely that these mutations already commit a GC B cell to malignant transformation. Under the assumption of a multistep lymphomagenesis, however, deleterious mutations within the DD can favor the persistence of mutant GC B cells until further transforming events take place.
A number of features of GC B cell physiology (e.g., high proliferation rate, somatic hypermutation, class switch recombination) bear an inherent risk of malignant transformation 27. The finding of deleterious CD95 mutations in GC B cells supports the concept that the GC reaction, besides its physiological role, is a potential source of oncogenic alterations predisposing to B cell lymphoma.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft through SFB 502. R. Küppers is supported by a Heisenberg Award from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, B. Jungnickel holds a Leopoldina postdoctoral fellowship, D. Re is supported by the Marie und Friedrich Sophie Moritz'sche Stiftung (Cologne, Germany), and M. Müschen holds a postdoctoral fellowship from the Cancer Research Institute (Tumor Immunology Program, New York, NY).
Submitted: 5 July 2000
Revised: 29 August 2000
Accepted: 26 September 2000
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Rajewsky K.. Clonal selection and learning in the antibody system, Nature, 381, 1996, 751–758.[Medline]
Klein U., Goossens T., Fischer M., Kanzler H., Braeuninger A., Rajewsky K. & Küppers R.. Somatic hypermutation in normal and transformed human B cells, Immunol. Rev., 162, 1998, 261–280.[Medline]
Shen H.M., Peters A., Baron B., Zhu X. & Storb U.. Mutation of the bcl-6 gene in normal B cells by the process of somatic hypermutation of Ig genes, Science., 280, 1998, 1750–1752.
Pasqualucci L., Migliazza A., Fracchiolla N., William C., Neri A., Baldini L., Chaganti R.S., Klein U., Küppers R. & Rajewsky K.. BCL-6 mutations in normal germinal center B cellsevidence of somatic hypermutation acting outside Ig loci, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 95, 1998, 11816–11821.
Müschen M., Warskulat U. & Beckmann M.W.. Defining CD95 as a tumor suppressor gene, J. Mol. Med., 78, 2000, 312–325.[Medline]
Smith K.G., Nossal G.J. & Tarlinton D.M.. Fas is highly expressed in the germinal center but is not required for regulation of the B-cell response to antigen, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 92, 1995, 11628–11632.
Martinez-Valdez H., Guret C., de Bouteiller O., Fugier I., Banchereau J. & Liu Y.J.. Human germinal center B cells express the apoptosis-inducing genes Fas, c-myc, p53 and Bax but not the survival gene bcl-2, J. Exp. Med., 183, 1996, 971–977.
Lagresle C., Bella C., Daniel P.T., Krammer P.H. & Defrance T.. Regulation of germinal center B cell differentiation. Role of the human Apo-1/Fas (CD95) molecule, J. Immunol., 154, 1995, 5746–5756.[Abstract]
Cleary A.M., Fortune S.M., Yellin M.J., Chess L. & Lederman S.. Opposing roles of CD95 (Fas/Apo-1) and CD40 in the death and rescue of human low density tonsillar B cells, J. Immunol., 155, 1995, 3329–3337.[Abstract]
Choe J., Kim H.S., Zhang X., Armitage R.J. & Choi Y.S.. Cellular and molecular factors that regulate the differentiation and apoptosis of germinal center B cells. Anti-Ig downregulates Fas expression of CD40 ligand-stimulated germinal center B cells and inhibits Fas-mediated apoptosis, J. Immunol., 157, 1996, 1006–1016.[Abstract]
Liu Y.J., de Bouteiller O. & Fugier-Vivier I.. Mechanisms of selection and differentiation in germinal centers, Curr. Opin. Immunol., 9, 1997, 256–262.[Medline]
Watanabe-Fukunaga R., Brannan P.E., Copeland N.G., Jenkins N. & Nagata S.. Lymphoproliferation disorder in mice explained by defects in Fas antigen that mediates apoptosis, Nature., 356, 1992, 314–317.[Medline]
Davidson W.F., Giese T. & Fredrickson T.N.. Spontaneous development of plasmacytoid tumors in mice with defective Fas–Fas ligand interactions, J. Exp. Med., 187, 1998, 1825–1838.
Fisher G.H., Rosenberg F.J., Straus S.E., Dale J.K., Middleton L.A., Lin A.Y., Strober W. & Lenardo M.J.. Dominant interfering Fas gene mutations impair apoptosis in a human autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome, Cell., 81, 1995, 935–946.[Medline]
Lim M.S., Straus S.E., Dale J.K., Fleischer T.A., Stetler-Stevenson M., Strober W., Sneller M.C., Puck J.M., Lenardo M.J. & Elenitoba-Johnson K.S.. Pathological findings in human autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome, Am. J. Pathol., 153, 1998, 1541–1550.
Landowski T.H., Qu N., Buyuksal I., Painter J.S. & Dalton W.S.. Mutations in the Fas antigen in patients with multiple myeloma, Blood., 90, 1997, 4266–4270.
Grønbaek K., Straten P.T., Ralfkiaeer E., Ahrenkiel V., Andersen M.K., Hansen N.E., Zeuthen J., Hou-Jensen K. & Guldberg P.. Somatic Fas mutations in non-Hodgkin's lymphomaassociation with extranodal disease and autoimmunity, Blood., 92, 1998, 3018–3024.
Krammer P.H.. CD95 (Apo-1/Fas)-mediated apoptosislive and let die, Adv. Immunol., 71, 1999, 163–210.[Medline]
Goossens T., Klein U. & Küppers R.. Frequent occurrence of deletions and duplications during somatic hypermutationimplications for oncogene translocations and heavy chain disease, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 95, 1998, 2463–2468.
Jungnickel B., Staratschek-Jox A., Bräuninger A., Spieker T., Wolf J., Diehl V., Hansmann M.-L., Rajewsky K. & Küppers R.. Clonal deleterious mutations in the I
B
gene in the malignant cells in Hodgkin's lymphoma, J. Exp. Med., 191, 2000, 395–401.
Zhang L., Cui X., Schmitt K., Hubert R., Navidi W. & Arnheim N.. Whole genome amplification of a single cellimplication for genetic analysis, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 89, 1992, 5847–5851.
Mangeney M., Rousselet G., Taga S., Tursz T. & Wiels J.. The fate of human CD77+ germinal center B lymphocytes after rescue from apoptosis, Mol. Immunol., 32, 1995, 333–339.[Medline]
Durandy, A., F. Le Deist, J.F. Emile, K.M. Debatin, and A. Fischer. Sensitivity of Epstein-Barr virus induced B cell tumor to apoptosis mediated by anti-CD95/Apo-1/Fas antibody. 1997. Eur. J. Immunol. 27:538–543.
Rothstein T.L., Wang J.K.M., Panka D.J., Foote L.C., Wang Z., Stanger B., Cui H., Ju S.T. & Marshak-Rothstein A.. Protection against Fas-dependent Th1-mediated apoptosis by antigen receptor engagement in B cells, Nature., 374, 1995, 163–165.[Medline]
Pulendran B., Kannourakis G., Nouri S., Smith K.G.C. & Nossal G.J.V.. Soluble antigen can cause enhanced apoptosis of germinal centre B cells, Nature., 375, 1995, 331–334.[Medline]
Müschen M., Re D., Bräuninger A., Wolf J., Hansmann M.-L., Diehl V., Küppers R. & Rajewsky K.. Somatic mutations of the CD95 gene in Hodgkin- and Reed-Sternberg cells, Cancer Res., 60, 2000, 5640–5643.
Küppers R., Klein U., Hansmann M.-L. & Rajewsky K.. Cellular origin of human B-cell lymphomas, N. Engl. J. Med., 341, 1999, 1520–1529.
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| TABLE OF CONTENTS |
|