Determination of B-cell clonality in Hodgkin’s lymphoma

Yu.V. Sidorova, N.V. Ryzhikova, S.Yu. Smirnova, E.E. Nikulina, B.V. Biderman, A.M. Kovrigina, T.N. Moiseeva, N.N. Sharkunov, and A.B. Sudarikov

Hematology Research Center, Moscow, Russian Federation


ABSTRACT

B-cell origin of Hodgkin’s lymphoma was demonstrated using microdissection and single cell PCR of Reed-Sternberg and Hodgkin cells (R. Kuppers et al., 1994). We assessed B-cell clonality in the biopsy samples of 35 patients with Hodgkin’s lymphoma without microdissection. B-cell clonality was evaluated using PCR amplification by IGH (FR1, FR2, FR3) and IGK (Vk-Jk, Vk/intron-Kde) gene rearrangements with multiplex BIOMED-2 primer sets and subsequent fragment analysis using ABI PRISM 3130 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems). Clonality was found in 11 out of 35 (31,5 %) formalin fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) lymph node specimens from patients with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. In 11 cases when both FFPE and fresh frozen samples were available, we observed the similar results with the specimens of both types. No correlation was found between the presence of B-cell clones and age, histological type of Hodgkin lymphoma, type of tumor cell growth (syncytial or diffuse), number of eosinophils in tissues, or CD20/CD15 expression on the surface of tumor cells. The high incidence of B-cell clonality determined in Hodgkin’s lymphoma biopsy samples makes the B-cell clonality assay unsuitable for differential diagnosis between Hodgkin’s lymphoma and B-cell lymphomas.


Keywords: Hodgkin’s lymphoma, B-cell clonality, PCR, immunoglobulin gene rearrangements.

Read in PDF (RUS)pdficon


REFERENCES

  1. Ковригина А.М., Пробатова Н.А. Лимфома Ходжкина и крупноклеточная лимфома. М.: МИА, 2007. [Kovrigina A.M., Probatova N.A. Limfoma Khodzhkina i krupnokletochnye limfomy (Hodgkin’s lymphoma and large-cell lymphomas). M.: MIA, 2007: 212.]
  2. Harris N.L., Jaffe E.S., Stein H. et al. A Revised European-American classification of lymphoid neoplasms: a proposal from the International Lymphoma Study Group. Blood 1994; 84: 1361–92.
  3. Harris N.L., Jaffe E.S., Diebold J. et al. The World Health Organization Classification of Neoplastic Diseases of the Hematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues. Ann. Oncol. 1999; 10: 1419–32.
  4. Kuppers R., Rajewsky K., Zhao M. et al. Hodgkin disease: Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells picked from histological sections show clonal immunoglobulin gene rearrangements and appear to be derived from B cells at various stages of development. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U S A 1994; 91: 10962–6.
  5. Marafioti T., Hummel M., Foss H.-D. et al. Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells represent an expansion of a single clone originating from a germinal centre B-cell with functional immunoglobulin gene rearrangements but defective immunoglobulin transcription. Blood 2000; 95: 1443–50.
  6. Re D., Muschen M., Ahmadi T. et al. Oct-2 and Bob-1 deficiency in Hodgkin and Reed Sternberg cells. Cancer Res. 2001; 61: 2080–4.
  7. Jundt F., Kley K., Anagnostopoulos I. et al. Loss of PU.1 expression is associated with defective immunoglobulin transcription in Hodgkin and ReedSternberg cells of classical Hodgkin disease. Blood 2002; 99: 3060–2.
  8. Ushmorov A., Ritz O., Hummel M. et al. Epigenetic silencing of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene in classical Hodgkin lymphoma-derived cell lines contributes to the loss of immunoglobulin expression. Blood 2004; 104: 3326–34.
  9. Theil J., Laumen H., Marafioti T. et al. Defective octamer-dependent transcription is responsible for silenced immunoglobulin transcription in ReedSternberg cells. Blood 2001; 97: 3191–6.
  10. Kanzler H., Kuppers R., Hansmann M.L. et al. Hodgkin and ReedSternberg cells in Hodgkin’s disease represent the outgrowth of a dominant tumor clone derived from (crippled) germinal center B cells. J. Exp. Med. 1996; 184: 1495–505.
  11. Brauninger A., Schmitz R., Bechtel D. et al. Molecular biology of Hodgkin’s and Reed/Sternberg cells in Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Int. J. Cancer 2006; 118: 1853–61.
  12. Angel C.A., Pringle J.H., Naylor J. et al. Analysis of antigen receptor genes in Hodgkin’s disease. J. Clin. Pathol. 1993; 46(4): 337–40.
  13. Kamel O.W., Chang P.P., Hsu F.J. et al. Clonal VDJ recombination of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene by PCR in classical Hodgkin’s disease. Am. J. Clin. Pathol. 1995; 104: 419–23.
  14. Manzanal A., Santon A., Oliva H. et al. Evaluation of clonal immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangements in Hodgkin’s disease using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Histopathology 1995; 27: 21–5.
  15. Chute D.J., Cousar J.B., Mahadevan M.S. et al. Detection of immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements in classic Hodgkin lymphoma using commercially available BIOMED-2 primers. Diagn. Mol. Pathol. 2008; 17(2): 65–72.
  16. Hebeda K.M., Van Altena M.C., Rombout P. et al. PCR clonality detection in Hodgkin lymphoma. J. Hemat. 2009; 2(1): 34–41.
  17. Burack W.R., Laughlin T.S., Friedberg J.W. et al. PCR assays detect B-lymphocyte clonality in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens of classical Hodgkin lymphoma without microdissection. Am. J. Clin. Pathol. 2010; 134(1): 104–11.
  18. Wu L., Patten N., Yamashiro C.T., Chui B. Extraction and amplification of DNA from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. Appl. Immunohistochem. Mol. Morphol. 2002; 10: 269–74.
  19. Coombs N.J., Gough A.C., Primrose J.N. Optimisation of DNA and RNA extraction from archival formalin-fixed tissue. Nucl. Acids Res. 1999; 27: e12.
  20. Sidorova J.V., Biderman B.V., Nikulina E.E., Sudarikov A.B. A simple and efficient method for DNA extraction from skin and paraffin-embedded tissues applicable to T-cell clonality assays. Exp. Dermatol. 2012; 21(1): 57–60.
  21. Dongen J.J., Langerak A.W., Bruggemann M. et al. Design and standardization of PCR primers and protocols for detection of clonal immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor gene recombinations in suspect lymphoproliferations: report of the BIOMED-2 Concerted Action BMH4-CT98-3936. Leukemia 2003; 17(12): 2257–317.
  22. Jarrett R.F. Viruses and lymphoma/leukaemia. J. Pathol. 2006; 208(2): 176–86.
  23. Al Saati T., Galoin S., Gravel S. et al. IgH and TcR-gamma gene rearrangements identified in Hodgkin disease by PCR demonstrate lack of correlation between genotype, phenotype, and Epstein–Barr virus status. J. Pathol. 1997; 181(4): 387–93.
  24. Manzanal A.I., Santon A., Acevedo A. et al. Molecular analysis of the IgH gene in 212 cases of Hodgkin’s disease: correlation of IgH clonality with the histologic and the immunocytochemical features. Mod. Pathol. 1997; 10(7): 679–85.