Gene Expression Profiling of B Cell Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Reveals a Homogeneous Phenotype Related to Memory B Cells

B cell-derived Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) represents a common malignancy whose cell derivation and pathogenesis are unknown. Recent studies have shown that >50% of CLLs display hypermutated immunoglobulin variable region (IgV) sequences and a more favorable prognosis, suggesting that they may represent a distinct subset of CLLs which have transited through germinal centers (GC), the physiologic site of IgV hypermutation. To further investigate the phenotype of CLLs, their cellular derivation and their relationship to normal B cells, we have analyzed their gene expression profiles using oligonucleotide based DNA chip microarrays representative of ~12,000 genes. The results show that CLLs display a common and characteristic gene expression profile that is largely independent of their IgV genotype. Nevertheless, a restricted number of genes (<30) have been identified whose differential expression can distinguish IgV mutated versus unmutated cases and identify them in independent panels of cases. Comparison of CLL profiles with those of purified normal B cell subpopulations (naïve, memory, GC centroblasts and centrocytes, CD5+ B cells) indicates that the common CLL profile is related to that of memory B cells. Finally, this analysis has identified a subset of genes specifically expressed by CLL cells that may have pathogenetic significance and represent potential diagnostic and therapeutic targets.

By: Ulf Klein, Yuhai Tu, Gustavo A. Stolovitzky, Michela Mattiolli, Giorgio Cattoretti, Herve Husson, Arnold Freedman, Giorgio Inghirami, Lillia Cro, Luca Baldini, Antonino Neri, Andrea Califano, Ricardo Dalla-Favera

Published in: Journal of Experimental Medicine, volume 194, (no 11), pages 1625-38 in 2001

Please obtain a copy of this paper from your local library. IBM cannot distribute this paper externally.

Questions about this service can be mailed to reports@us.ibm.com .