Sampalo A, Navas G, Medina F, Segundo C, Cámara C, Brieva J A
Servicio de Inmunología, Hospital Universitario Puerta del Mar, Cádiz, Spain.
Blood. 2000 Nov 1;96(9):3168-74.
A variable degree of humoral immunodeficiency is a common feature in patients with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). The aim of this study was to explore the possibility that B-CLL cells play a direct role in this phenomenon. To this end, patients' bone marrow (BM) immunoglobulin (Ig)-secreting cells were cocultured with autologous purified B-CLL cells. The results show that tumoral cells inhibited the spontaneous IgG secretion by BM plasma cells, and this effect increased after PMA-induction of B-CLL cells. This inhibitory process was proportional to the number of B-CLL cells added and depended on cellular contact. Adhesion molecules did not appear to be involved in the cellular interaction, because the inclusion of blocking antibody to a variety of these proteins did not reverse the inhibitory phenomenon. However, the addition of monoclonal antibody that blocked the function of either CD95 or CD95L clearly reversed B-CLL cell inhibition on autologous BM plasma cells. These latter cells were shown to express CD95, and B-CLL cells contained detectable quantities of CD95L at the level of messenger RNA and protein. Annexin V-binding experiments revealed increased apoptosis of BM Ig-secreting cells when cocultured with autologous B-CLL cells. Finally, this inhibitory phenomenon might be operative in vivo because (a) there was a good correlation between the intensity of the inhibitory effect in vitro and the serum IgG level exhibited by every patient and (b) B-CLL cells also inhibited in vivo antigen-induced IgG-tetanus toxoid-secreting cells obtained from normal immunized subjects. Collectively, these data suggest that B-CLL cells inhibit autologous CD95-bearing Ig-secreting cells by the interaction with CD95L present on B-CLL cells and, hence, contribute to the state of humoral immunodeficiency that occurs in these patients.
不同程度的体液免疫缺陷是B细胞慢性淋巴细胞白血病(B-CLL)患者的常见特征。本研究的目的是探讨B-CLL细胞在这一现象中发挥直接作用的可能性。为此,将患者骨髓(BM)免疫球蛋白(Ig)分泌细胞与自体纯化的B-CLL细胞进行共培养。结果显示,肿瘤细胞抑制了BM浆细胞的自发性IgG分泌,且在PMA诱导B-CLL细胞后这种作用增强。这种抑制过程与添加的B-CLL细胞数量成正比,且依赖于细胞接触。黏附分子似乎未参与细胞间相互作用,因为加入针对多种此类蛋白的阻断抗体并未逆转抑制现象。然而,添加阻断CD95或CD95L功能的单克隆抗体可明显逆转B-CLL细胞对自体BM浆细胞的抑制作用。后一类细胞显示表达CD95,而B-CLL细胞在信使RNA和蛋白水平含有可检测量的CD95L。膜联蛋白V结合实验显示,与自体B-CLL细胞共培养时,BM Ig分泌细胞的凋亡增加。最后,这种抑制现象可能在体内起作用,因为(a)体外抑制作用的强度与每位患者的血清IgG水平之间存在良好相关性,且(b)B-CLL细胞也抑制了从正常免疫受试者获得的体内抗原诱导的IgG-破伤风类毒素分泌细胞。总体而言,这些数据表明,B-CLL细胞通过与B-CLL细胞上存在的CD95L相互作用,抑制自体携带CD95的Ig分泌细胞,从而导致这些患者出现体液免疫缺陷状态。