EBV infection determines the immune hallmarks of plasmablastic lymphoma

Oncoimmunology. 2018 Jul 30;7(10):e1486950. doi: 10.1080/2162402X.2018.1486950. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Despite recent therapeutic progress, plasmablastic lymphoma (PBL), a distinct entity of high grade B cell lymphoma, is still an aggressive lymphoma with adverse prognosis. PBL commonly occurs in patients with HIV infection and PBL cells frequently express Epstein Barr virus (EBV) genome with type I latency. Occasionally however, PBL may develop in patients with an immunodepressed status without EBV and HIV infection. The aim of this study was to determine which PBL patients may benefit from the emerging strategies of immune checkpoint blockade. Here, we produced and analyzed the transcriptomic profiles of such tumors to address this question. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering analysis of PBL samples revealed they segregate according to their tumor EBV-status. Moreover, EBV+ PBL displays abundant leucocyte infiltrates and T-cell activation signatures, together with high expression levels of mRNA and protein markers of immune escape. This suggests that EBV infection induce an anti-viral cytotoxic immunity which progressively exhausts T lymphocytes and promotes the tolerogenic microenvironment of PBL. Hence, most EBV+ PBL patients presenting an early stage of cancer immune-editing process appear as the most eligible patients for immune checkpoint blockade therapies.

Keywords: Epstein-Barr virus; Plasmablastic lymphoma; deep deconvolution; gene expression profile; immune checkpoints; immune escape; multiplex immunofluorescence.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Grants and funding

This work was supported in part by institutional grants from the Ligue Regionale de lutte contre le Cancer (Canceropole Grand Sud Ouest), the Institut National du Cancer (INCA), the Association de Recherche contre le Cancer (ARC) (subvention PJA 20131200091), the Laboratoire d’Excellence Toulouse Cancer (TOUCAN) (contract ANR11-LABX), the Programme Hospitalo-Universitaire en Cancérologie CAPTOR (contract ANR11-PHUC0001), and the Institut Carnot Lymphome (CALYM). Pauline Gravelle is supported by CeVi_Collection project, from the CALYM Carnot Institute, funded by the French National Research Council (ANR). Pierre Brousset is supported by the Institut Universitaire de France.”