AI Article Synopsis

  • Neoplastic transformation of mature B cells can occur through class-switch recombination, which can mistakenly affect a protooncogene, leading to cancer.
  • Activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) is crucial for class-switch recombination and is expressed in various secondary lymphoid organs, not just in germinal centers.
  • The study identifies interfollicular large B cells as a key population that expresses AID, suggesting they may contribute to the development of mature B-cell malignancies.

Article Abstract

Neoplastic transformation of mature B cells can be triggered by class-switch recombination of the immunoglobulin gene, which aberrantly targets a protooncogene and promotes translocation. Class-switch recombination is initiated by the B-cell-specific protein activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID). Using immunohistochemistry with a newly generated monoclonal antibody and quantitative reverse-transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) on microdissected tissue from lymph node, tonsil, and thymus, we demonstrate that AID expression is found in secondary lymphoid organs outside germinal centers and in the thymic medulla at substantial levels. This is accompanied by the presence of circle transcripts, indicating class-switch recombination to be active at these sites. The dominant AID-expressing cell population outside germinal centers displays cytomorphologic properties corresponding to those that define the recently characterized interfollicular large B-cell subset. These findings indicate that interfollicular large B cells and AID-expressing B lymphocytes of the thymic medulla could give rise to mature B-cell malignancies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2005-06-2502DOI Listing

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