Anaplastic large cell lymphoma arises in thymocytes and requires transient TCR expression for thymic egress

Tim Malcolm(University of Cambridge), Patrick Villarèse(Délégation Paris 5), Camilla Fairbairn(University of Cambridge), Laurence Lamant(Institut universitaire du cancer de Toulouse Oncopole), Amélie Trinquand(Délégation Paris 5), C. Elizabeth Hook(Addenbrooke's Hospital), G.A. Amos Burke(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Laurence Brugières(Institut Gustave Roussy), Katherine Hughes(University of Cambridge), Dominique Payet‐Bornet(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Olaf Merkel(Medical University of Vienna), Ana‐Iris Schiefer(Medical University of Vienna), Ibraheem Ashankyty(University of Ha'il), Shahzad I. Mian(University of Ha'il), Mariusz A. Wasik(University of Pennsylvania), Martin Turner(Babraham Institute), Lukas Kenner(University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna), Vahid Asnafi(Délégation Paris 5), Elizabeth Macintyre(Délégation Paris 5), Suzanne D. Turner(University of Cambridge)
Nature Communications
January 12, 2016
Cited by 84Open Access
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Abstract

Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a peripheral T-cell lymphoma presenting mostly in children and young adults. The natural progression of this disease is largely unknown as is the identity of its true cell of origin. Here we present a model of peripheral ALCL pathogenesis where the malignancy is initiated in early thymocytes, before T-cell receptor (TCR) β-rearrangement, which is bypassed in CD4/NPM-ALK transgenic mice following Notch1 expression. However, we find that a TCR is required for thymic egress and development of peripheral murine tumours, yet this TCR must be downregulated for T-cell lymphomagenesis. In keeping with this, clonal TCR rearrangements in human ALCL are predominantly in-frame, but often aberrant, with clonal TCRα but no comparable clonal TCRβ rearrangement, yielding events that would not normally be permissive for survival during thymic development. Children affected by ALCL may thus harbour thymic lymphoma-initiating cells capable of seeding relapse after chemotherapy.


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