Publication | Open Access
RhoA G17V is sufficient to induce autoimmunity and promotes T-cell lymphomagenesis in mice
120
Citations
51
References
2018
Year
Patients with angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL) and other peripheral T-cell lymphomas that harbor features of follicular helper T (T<sub>FH</sub>) cells have a very poor prognosis. These lymphomas commonly present with paraneoplastic autoimmunity and lymphopenia. RhoA G17V mutation is present in 60% of T<sub>FH</sub>-like lymphomas, but its role in tumorigenesis is poorly understood. We generated transgenic mice that express RhoA G17V under the control of murine CD4 regulatory elements at levels comparable to a heterozygous mutation (tgRhoA mice). These mice had markedly reduced naive T cells but relatively increased T<sub>FH</sub>-cell populations. Surprisingly, naive CD4 T cells expressing RhoA G17V were hyperreactive to T-cell receptor stimulation. All tgRhoA mice developed autoimmunity that included a cellular infiltrate within ears and tails that was recapitulated in wild-type (WT) recipients after bone marrow transplantation. Older tgRhoA mice developed elevated serum titers of anti-double-stranded DNA antibodies and renal immune complex deposition. RhoA G17V mice crossed with <i>Tet2</i><sup>fl/fl</sup>; Vav-Cre<sup>+</sup> mice, which delete <i>Tet2</i> throughout the hematopoietic compartment, developed T-cell lymphomas that retained histologic and immunophenotypic features of AITL and had transcriptional signatures enriched for mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR)-associated genes. Transplanted tumors were responsive to the mTOR inhibitor everolimus, providing a possible strategy for targeting RhoA G17V. Taken together, these data indicate that RhoA G17V contributes to both neoplastic and paraneoplastic phenotypes similar to those observed in patients with T<sub>FH</sub> lymphomas.
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