• IRF4-C99R mutations are recurrent in PMBCL and lead to a differentiation block, elevated TARC expression and regulatory T cell chemotaxis.

  • IRF4 mutation-associated upregulation of EPHB1 leads to lymphoma organotropism favoring thymic involvement.

Disease-defining signatures in lymphomas, driven by intricate molecular mechanisms, have advanced molecular taxonomies, refined classification, and may guide clinical management; however, the role of these signatures in driving disease hallmarks including subtype-specific organotropism remains largely unexplored. Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMBCL) is an exemplary lymphoma characterized by disease manifestations in the thymic niche, unique genetic alterations and immune escape. Here, we identified IRF4-C99R mutations uniquely occurring in PMBCL through mutational meta-analysis of large-scale datasets. Our functional studies, integrating multi-omics approaches with genome editing in PMBCL cells, revealed that IRF4-C99R contributes to a differentiation block phenotype. Specifically, we showed that IRF4-C99R reduces its binding to the ISRE motif within PRDM1, which encodes a key transcriptional regulator of B-cell differentiation, resulting in decreased PRDM1 expression. Additionally, IRF4-C99R suppresses TNIK, a key IFNγ pathway regulator, by impairing ISRE motif binding, thereby reducing IFNγ signaling and increasing thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC) expression, which drives TARC-mediated chemotaxis of T regulatory cells. We also revealed that IRF4-C99R upregulates Ephrin Type-B Receptor 1 (EPHB1) through non-canonical AICE motif binding, and showed that overexpression of EPHB1 in an immunocompetent syngeneic lymphoma model influenced organotropism to favor thymic localization, without affecting tumor burden in other organs. IRF4-C99R mutation-induced phenotypes were validated in primary PMBCL tissues using single-nuclei RNA sequencing, confirming that the molecular mechanisms observed in vitro align with the pathophysiology of PMBCL in patients. Together, these findings demonstrate how a single genetic mutation orchestrates the coordinated regulation of hallmark traits including thymus-specific tropism in PMBCL.

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