Chang Andres, Pelletier Adam N, McGuire Donald J, Tsagiopoulou Maria, Karipidou Maria, Ayers Amy, Leal Alyssa M K, Churnetski Michael C, O'Leary Colin B, Switchenko Jeffrey M, Davis Carl, Frank David A, Koff Jean L, Cohen Jonathon B, Sekaly Rafick P, Stamatopoulos Kostas, Flowers Christopher R, Ahmed Rafi
Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology, Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30322.
Emory Vaccine Center, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30322.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Sep 9;122(36):e2426935122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2426935122. Epub 2025 Sep 4.
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) remains incurable despite treatment advances, and a major challenge is that biomarkers that predict response and resistance to current therapies are lacking. We report that activated and proliferating malignant CLL B cells in circulation express PD-1, a protein normally expressed in T cells. PD-1 expression is absent in circulating B cells from healthy controls and nonmalignant B cells from patients with CLL. Circulating PD-1 CLL cells are found in all treatment naïve patients, regardless of immunoglobulin heavy-chain variable region gene mutation status or cytogenetic abnormalities. PD-1 CLL cells are transcriptionally distinct compared to PD-1 CLL cells and upregulate genes associated with cell activation, proliferation, and B cell receptor (BCR) and toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling. Indeed, ex vivo stimulation of the BCR and TLR9 readily increased PD-1 expression in CLL cells from treatment-naïve patients within 24 h, an effect that was blocked by Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitors (BTKi). More importantly, patients initiating BTKi therapy experienced profound reductions in circulating PD-1 CLL cell numbers within 1 mo, which is in line with reduction in Ki-67 CLL cells. Elevated percentages of circulating PD-1 CLL cells also preceded a clinical diagnosis of disease progression in patients receiving BTKi. Thus, our findings indicate that PD-1 expression is a potential biomarker to identify proliferating CLL cells in vivo and will be useful to predict response and resistance to BTKi. In addition, eliminating PD-1 CLL cells with depleting anti-PD-1 monospecific or bispecific antibodies should be explored as a potential therapeutic strategy.
尽管治疗取得了进展,但慢性淋巴细胞白血病(CLL)仍然无法治愈,一个主要挑战是缺乏能够预测对当前疗法反应和耐药性的生物标志物。我们报告称,循环中活化和增殖的恶性CLL B细胞表达PD-1,该蛋白通常在T细胞中表达。健康对照者的循环B细胞和CLL患者的非恶性B细胞中不存在PD-1表达。在所有未经治疗的患者中均发现循环中的PD-1⁺ CLL细胞,无论其免疫球蛋白重链可变区基因突变状态或细胞遗传学异常情况如何。与PD-1⁻ CLL细胞相比,PD-1⁺ CLL细胞在转录上具有明显差异,并上调与细胞活化、增殖以及B细胞受体(BCR)和Toll样受体(TLR)信号传导相关的基因。实际上,对BCR和TLR9进行体外刺激可在24小时内使未经治疗患者的CLL细胞中PD-1表达显著增加,这一效应可被布鲁顿酪氨酸激酶抑制剂(BTKi)阻断。更重要的是,开始接受BTKi治疗的患者在1个月内循环中PD-1⁺ CLL细胞数量大幅减少,这与Ki-67⁺ CLL细胞数量的减少一致。在接受BTKi治疗的患者中,循环中PD-1⁺ CLL细胞百分比升高也先于疾病进展的临床诊断。因此,我们的研究结果表明,PD-1表达是一种潜在的生物标志物,可用于在体内识别增殖的CLL细胞,并且将有助于预测对BTKi的反应和耐药性。此外,应探索使用消耗性抗PD-1单特异性或双特异性抗体消除PD-1⁺ CLL细胞作为一种潜在的治疗策略。