Title of article
Leukemic B cells clonally identical to myeloma plasma cells are myelomagenic in NOD/SCID mice
Author/Authors
Linda M. Pilarski، نويسنده , , Karen Seeberger، نويسنده , , Robert W. Coupland، نويسنده , , Alana Eshpeter، نويسنده , , Jonathan J. Keats، نويسنده , , Brian J. Taylor، نويسنده , , Andrew R. Belch، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
8
From page
221
To page
228
Abstract
Objective
In multiple myeloma (MM), the immunoglobulin gene rearrangement characterizing malignant plasma cells is unique. For a patient with multiple myeloma who underwent a B-cell leukemic blast transformation, using the immunoglobulin molecular signature, we characterized the clonal relationship to autologous plasma cells and the impact on normal polyclonal B-lymphocyte populations.
Methods
Single-cell reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)/PCR was used to determine the clonal relationship between autologous MM plasma cells and leukemic B cells. A murine xenograft model was used to determine the myelomagenic potential of the leukemic B cells.
Results
Single-cell analysis showed that circulating leukemic-phase cells were clonotypic, with an IgH VDJ sequence identical to that of diagnosis plasma cells. Analysis of IgH transcripts indicates MM clonal dominance over normal B-cell components of the immune system at diagnosis and during leukemic disease. Leukemic B cells were xenografted to irradiated NOD/SCID mice, leading to lytic bone lesions and clonotypic cells in murine BM. Although human cells in murine BM expressed CD138, a marker largely absent from ex vivo leukemic cells, the expression of CD45, CD19, and CD20 confirmed that engrafting cells were mature, probably late-stage B cells rather than plasma cells.
Conclusions
Leukemic B cells are able to exert strong clonal dominance over normal components of the immune system, colonize the murine BM in a xenograft model, and disrupt normal bone metabolism leading to lytic bone lesions. This supports the hypothesis that clonotypic MM B cells are reservoirs of disease that persist throughout therapy and give rise to relapse.
Journal title
Experimental Hematology
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
Experimental Hematology
Record number
513647
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