Abstract
Roughly 30% of Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) patients do not respond to standard treatment or relapse after initial therapy. Relapsed DLBCL treatments are limited and less effective, highlighting the need for new therapies. Unfortunately, our current understanding of the molecular mechanisms of DLBCL relapse is poor. We hypothesize that clonal heterogeneity may contribute to disease progression. Here, we sought to explore patterns of clonal heterogeneity and evolution during DLBCL relapse by exploiting unique features of B-cell lymphomas: VDJ recombination and somatic hypermutation (SHM); and to identify genetic events underling DLBCL relapse.
To further investigate these evolutionary patterns, we performed exome-seq on 8 pairs for which we had sufficient tissue (5 linear, 3 divergent). By comparing R to matched D sample, we found that linear mode R tumors gained roughly 4 times more coding-region single nucleotide variations (SNVs) than they lost (5.2±1.9 fold), while the divergent mode R tumors gained and lost similar number of SNVs (1.4±0.7 fold). These results are consistent with our VDJ phylogenetic analysis that tumors evolve divergently undergo evolution of their genomes in parallel and acquire different sets of mutations independently; whereas tumors evolve linearly only acquire additional mutations at relapse.
Finally, exome-seq revealed potential molecular mechanisms of lymphomagenesis and relapse. First, 5 R samples had genetic lesions of CD58 or B2M, two genes involving in immune surveillance escape, suggesting that escaping immune surveillance via genetic alteration may be a common relapse strategy. Moreover, in all three divergent pairs, there were histone modifier mutations shared between D and R tumors, including mutations in MLL2, EP300, and SETDB1, suggesting that these mutations could act as early “drivers” or “facilitators” to establish aberrant epigenetic landscape in tumor initiating cells favoring malignant transformation.
Altogether, our study for the first time provides important evidence that DLBCL relapse may result from multiple, distinct tumor evolutionary mechanisms, providing rationale for therapies for each mechanism. Moreover, this study highlights the urgent need to understand the driving roles of epigenetic modifier mutations in lymphomagenesis, and immune surveillance factor mutations in relapse.
Martin: Teva: Consultancy, Research Funding; Celgene: Consultancy, Research Funding; Genentech: Speakers Bureau; Millennium: Research Funding; Seattle Genetics: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.
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