The tumor-infiltrating B cell response in medullary breast cancer is oligoclonal and directed against the autoantigen actin exposed on the surface of apoptotic cancer …

MH Hansen, H Nielsen… - Proceedings of the …, 2001 - National Acad Sciences
MH Hansen, H Nielsen, HJ Ditzel
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001National Acad Sciences
Medullary carcinoma of the breast (MCB) is a morphologically and biologically distinct
subtype of human breast cancer that, despite cytologically anaplastic features, has a more
favorable prognosis than other types of breast cancer at similar stages of differentiation. It
has been proposed that the improved clinical outcome is due, at least in part, to the
presence of a prominent lymphoplasmacytic cell infiltrate in the tumor stroma. We studied
the B lymphoplasmacytic cell infiltrates in MCB to determine the role of the antibody …
Medullary carcinoma of the breast (MCB) is a morphologically and biologically distinct subtype of human breast cancer that, despite cytologically anaplastic features, has a more favorable prognosis than other types of breast cancer at similar stages of differentiation. It has been proposed that the improved clinical outcome is due, at least in part, to the presence of a prominent lymphoplasmacytic cell infiltrate in the tumor stroma. We studied the B lymphoplasmacytic cell infiltrates in MCB to determine the role of the antibody response produced by the local infiltrating cells. Oligoclonal predominance among tumor-infiltrating B cells in a panel of MCB patients was observed, suggesting that certain B cell clones were expanded, possibly in response to specific tumor-associated stimuli. IgG antibody phage-display libraries were generated from MCB-infiltrating lymphoplasmacytic cells of two patients, and MCB-reactive monoclonal antibodies were retrieved by selection on fresh-frozen MCB tissue sections. Analysis by mass spectrometry revealed that the antigen targeted by the dominant clones in the oligoclonal B lymphoplasmacytic response in both patients was not a cancer-specific antigen but the cytoskeletal protein β-actin. MCB exhibits an increased rate of apoptosis, and apoptotic MCB cells were shown to expose actin on the cell surface, permitting its recognition by the humoral immune system. Further, actin fragments, similar to those observed after cleavage with the apoptotic protease granzyme B, were observed in MCB tissue. Our results indicate that the major antibody response produced by tumor-infiltrating B lymphoplasmacytic cells are autoimmune in nature and a consequence of the perturbed state of increased MCB apoptosis caused by granzyme B-induced T cell cytotoxicity and/or intrinsic cellular factors of MCB cells.
National Acad Sciences