Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5527588 | Experimental Hematology | 2017 | 17 Pages |
â¢Surface CD5 expression heterogeneity exists within CLL clones.â¢The majority of CD5low B cells in CLL are part of the leukemic clone.â¢Large-scale dynamic relationships exist between CD5high and CD5low B cells in CLL.â¢This phenomenon has implications for disease biology and treatment.
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by the accumulation of clonally derived mature CD5high BÂ cells; however, the cellular origin of CLL is still unknown. Patients with CLL also harbor variable numbers of CD5low BÂ cells, but the clonal relationship of these cells to the bulk disease is unknown and can have important implications for monitoring, treating, and understanding the biology of CLL. Here, we use B-cell receptors (BCRs) as molecular barcodes to first show by single-cell BCR sequencing that the great majority of CD5low BÂ cells in the blood of CLL patients are clonally related to CD5high CLL BÂ cells. We investigate whether CD5 state switching was likely to occur continuously as a common event or as a rare event in CLL by tracking somatic BCR mutations in bulk CLL BÂ cells and using them to reconstruct the phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary history of the CLL in four patients. Using statistical methods, we show that there is no parsimonious route from a single or low number of CD5low switch events to the CD5high population, but rather, large-scale and/or dynamic switching between these CD5 states is the most likely explanation. The overlapping BCR repertoires between CD5high and CD5low cells from CLL patient peripheral blood reveal that CLL exists in a continuum of CD5 expression. The major proportion of CD5low BÂ cells in patients are leukemic, thus identifying CD5low BÂ cells as an important component of CLL, with implications for CLL pathogenesis, clinical monitoring, and the development of anti-CD5-directed therapies.