Follicular lymphoma evolves with a surmountable dependency on acquired glycosylation motifs in the B cell receptor. Blood Haebe, S. E., Day, G., Czerwinski, D. K., Sathe, A., Grimes, S. M., Chen, T., Long, S. R., Martin, B. A., Ozawa, M. G., Ji, H. P., Shree, T., Levy, R. 2023

Abstract

An early event in the genesis of follicular lymphoma (FL) is the acquisition of new glycosylation motifs in the B cell receptor (BCR) due to gene rearrangement and/or somatic hypermutation. These N-linked glycosylation motifs (N-motifs) contain mannose-terminated glycans and can interact with lectins in the tumor microenvironment, activating the tumor BCR pathway. N-motifs are stable during FL evolution suggesting that FL tumor cells are dependent on them for their survival. Here, we investigated the dynamics and potential impact of N-motif prevalence in FL at the single cell level across distinct tumor sites and over time in 17 patients. While most patients had acquired at least one N-motif as an early event, we also found (i) cases without N-motifs in the heavy or light chains at any tumor site or timepoint and (ii) cases with discordant N-motif patterns across different tumor sites. Inferring phylogenetic trees for the patients with discordant patterns, we observed that both N-motif-positive and N-motif-negative tumor subclones could be selected and expanded during tumor evolution. Comparing N-motif-positive to N-motif-negative tumor cells within a patient revealed higher expression of genes involved in the BCR pathway and inflammatory response, while tumor cells without N-motifs had higher activity of pathways involved in energy metabolism. In conclusion, while acquired N-motifs likely support FL pathogenesis through antigen-independent BCR signaling in most FL patients, N-motif-negative tumor cells can also be selected and expanded and may depend more heavily on altered metabolism for competitive survival.

View details for DOI 10.1182/blood.2023020360

View details for PubMedID 37683139