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CD163+ macrophages in mantle cell lymphoma induce activation of prosurvival pathways and immune suppression

Authors :
de Matos Rodrigues, Joana
Lokhande, Lavanya
Olsson, Lina M.
Hassan, May
Johansson, Angelica
Janská, Anna
Kumar, Darshan
Schmidt, Lina
Nikkarinen, Anna
Hollander, Peter
Glimelius, Ingrid
Porwit, Anna
Sandstrom Gerdtsson, Anna
Jerkeman, Mats
Ek, Sara
de Matos Rodrigues, Joana
Lokhande, Lavanya
Olsson, Lina M.
Hassan, May
Johansson, Angelica
Janská, Anna
Kumar, Darshan
Schmidt, Lina
Nikkarinen, Anna
Hollander, Peter
Glimelius, Ingrid
Porwit, Anna
Sandstrom Gerdtsson, Anna
Jerkeman, Mats
Ek, Sara
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is dependent on a supportive tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) in which infiltration of CD163+ macrophages has a negative prognostic impact. This study explores how abundance and spatial localization of CD163+ cells are associated with the biology of MCL, using spatial multiomic investigations of tumor and infiltrating CD163+ and CD3+ cells. A total of 63 proteins were measured using GeoMx digital spatial profiling in tissue microarrays from 100 diagnostic MCL tissues. Regions of interest were selected in tumor-rich and tumor-sparse tissue regions. Molecular profiling of CD163+ macrophages, CD20+ MCL cells, and CD3+ T-cells was performed. To validate protein profiles, 1811 messenger RNAs were measured in CD20+ cells and 2 subsets of T cells. Image analysis was used to extract the phenotype and position of each targeted cell, thereby allowing the exploration of cell frequencies and cellular neighborhoods. Proteomic investigations revealed that CD163+ cells modulate their immune profile depending on their localization and that the immune inhibitory molecules, V-domain immunoglobulin suppressor of T-cell activation and B7 homolog 3, have higher expression in tumor-sparse than in tumor-rich tissue regions and that targeting should be explored. We showed that MCL tissues with more abundant infiltration of CD163+ cells have a higher proteomic and transcriptional expression of key components of the MAPK pathway. Thus, the MAPK pathway may be a feasible therapeutic target in patients with MCL with CD163+ cell infiltration. We further showed the independent and combined prognostic values of CD11c and CD163 beyond established risk factors.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1457575912
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182.bloodadvances.2023012039