Discovery and characteristics of B cell-like T cells: A potential novel tumor immune marker?

Immunol Lett

First Teaching Hospital of Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Clinic Laboratory, Tianjin, China.

Published: April 2020

Background: CD3 and CD19 are the characteristic surface markers of mature T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes of human respectively. A special subset of immune cells that characteristically expressed the surface markers CD19+ of B lymphocytes and CD3+ of T lymphocytes simultaneously (CD19+CD3+ cells, hereinafter referred to as B-T cells) was found in the peripheral blood of human, yet it has not been reported in cancer research before. Our aims were to characterize the expression and possible value of B-T cells in cancer patients.

Methods: Flow cytometry was applied to analyse the CD19+CD3+ cells, and laser scanning confocal microscope was utilized to prove co-expressing CD19+ of B lymphocytes and CD3+ of T lymphocytes simultaneously on the surface of the cells. Then a total of 523 patients with malignant tumor were enrolled in this study, and 177 healthy donors were recruited as the control group. The levels of CD19+CD3+ cells in peripheral blood were measured by flow cytometry, and the differences between the two groups were compared.

Results: The healthy donors and cancer patients all had B-T cells in their peripheral blood, but the percentage of B-T cells was 0.16 % ± 0.11 % and 0.58 % ± 0.38 % respectively, showing statistically significant (P < 0.0001). There was no significant correlation between the percentage of B-T cells and lymphocyte subsets (P > 0.05). The percentages of B-T cells in different tumor species were different. The proportion of B-T cells was high in esophageal cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and lung cancer, but it was low in pancreatic cancer, ovarian cancer and kidney cancer. Meanwhile, there was significant difference between esophageal cancer and kidney cancer (P < 0.001). The distribution of B-T cells in pancreatic cancer and kidney cancer was more concentrated, yet more dispersed in other cancers. Although there was a trend of increase in clinical stage Ⅲ+Ⅳ and a trend of decrease in age above 60 years for breast cancer, gastric cancer and liver cancer, there was no significant difference in the percentage of B-T cells in age, gender, different clinical stages, tumor metastasis, lymph node metastasis, and splenomegaly (P > 0.05).

Conclusion: The percentage of B-T cells in cancer patients was significantly higher than that of healthy donors. B-T cells maybe play a very complicated role in tumor, whether it could be a potential tumor immune marker or not and what are the specific phenotypes and functions of it to need be further verified.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.imlet.2020.01.007DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

b-t cells
44
cells
17
cancer
16
percentage b-t
16
cd19+cd3+ cells
12
cells peripheral
12
peripheral blood
12
healthy donors
12
cancer kidney
12
kidney cancer
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!