Back to Search Start Over

Differentiation stage of myeloma plasma cells: Biological and clinical significance

Authors :
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
European Commission
European Research Council
Leukemia Research Foundation
American Association for Cancer Research
Qatar National Research Fund
Fundació La Marató de TV3
International Myeloma Foundation
Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer
Red Temática de Investigación Cooperativa en Cáncer (España)
Paiva, Bruno
Puig, Noemi
Cedena, Maria-Teresa
Jong, B. G. de
Ruiz, Y.
Rapado, Inmaculada
Martínez-López, Joaquín
Cordón, Lourdes
Alignani, Diego
Delgado, J. A.
Zelm, Menno C. van
Dongen, J. J. M. van
Pascual, M.
Agirre, Xavier
Prósper, Felipe
Martín-Subero, José Ignacio
Vidriales, Maria Belén
Gutiérrez, Norma Carmen
Oriol, Albert
Echeveste, María-Asunción
González, Yolanda
Johnson, S. K.
Epstein, J.
Barlogie, B.
Morgan, Gareth J.
Orfao, Alberto
Bladé, Joan
Mateos, Maria Victoria
Lahuerta, Juan José
Hernández, Mª Teresa
San Miguel, Jesús F.
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
European Commission
European Research Council
Leukemia Research Foundation
American Association for Cancer Research
Qatar National Research Fund
Fundació La Marató de TV3
International Myeloma Foundation
Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer
Red Temática de Investigación Cooperativa en Cáncer (España)
Paiva, Bruno
Puig, Noemi
Cedena, Maria-Teresa
Jong, B. G. de
Ruiz, Y.
Rapado, Inmaculada
Martínez-López, Joaquín
Cordón, Lourdes
Alignani, Diego
Delgado, J. A.
Zelm, Menno C. van
Dongen, J. J. M. van
Pascual, M.
Agirre, Xavier
Prósper, Felipe
Martín-Subero, José Ignacio
Vidriales, Maria Belén
Gutiérrez, Norma Carmen
Oriol, Albert
Echeveste, María-Asunción
González, Yolanda
Johnson, S. K.
Epstein, J.
Barlogie, B.
Morgan, Gareth J.
Orfao, Alberto
Bladé, Joan
Mateos, Maria Victoria
Lahuerta, Juan José
Hernández, Mª Teresa
San Miguel, Jesús F.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The notion that plasma cells (PCs) are terminally differentiated has prevented intensive research in multiple myeloma (MM) about their phenotypic plasticity and differentiation. Here, we demonstrated in healthy individuals (n=20) that the CD19-CD81 expression axis identifies three bone marrow (BM)PC subsets with distinct age-prevalence, proliferation, replication-history, immunoglobulin-production, and phenotype, consistent with progressively increased differentiation from CD19+CD81+ into CD19-CD81+ and CD19-CD81- BMPCs. Afterwards, we demonstrated in 225 newly diagnosed MM patients that, comparing to normal BMPC counterparts, 59% had fully differentiated (CD19-CD81-) clones, 38% intermediate-differentiated (CD19-CD81+) and 3% less-differentiated (CD19+CD81+) clones. The latter patients had dismal outcome, and PC differentiation emerged as an independent prognostic marker for progression-free (HR: 1.7; P=0.005) and overall survival (HR: 2.1; P=0.006). Longitudinal comparison of diagnostic vs minimal-residual-disease samples (n=40) unraveled that in 20% of patients, less-differentiated PCs subclones become enriched after therapy-induced pressure. We also revealed that CD81 expression is epigenetically regulated, that less-differentiated clonal PCs retain high expression of genes related to preceding B-cell stages (for example: PAX5), and show distinct mutation profile vs fully differentiated PC clones within individual patients. Together, we shed new light into PC plasticity and demonstrated that MM patients harbouring less-differentiated PCs have dismal survival, which might be related to higher chemoresistant potential plus different molecular and genomic profiles.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1103438924
Document Type :
Electronic Resource