Strong constitutive NF-κB signaling in B cells drives SLL/CLL-like lymphomagenesis and overcomes microenvironmental dependencies

Autor/innen

  • Valeria Soberón
  • Lena Osswald
  • Andrew Moore
  • Dominika Sosnowska
  • Gene Swinerd
  • Jingyu Chen
  • Seren Baygün
  • Carina Diehl
  • Gönül Seyhan
  • Laura Kraus
  • Vanessa Gölling
  • Ricarda Trapp
  • Thomas J. O'Neill
  • Sabrina Bortoluzzi
  • Daniel Kovacs
  • Tim Ammon
  • Pankaj Singroul
  • Yuliia Hubarzhevska
  • Rupert Öllinger
  • Sebastian Mueller
  • Olga Baranov
  • Piero Giansanti
  • Felix Gillhuber
  • Sonja Grath
  • Oliver Weigert
  • Andreas Rosenwald
  • Yoshiteru Sasaki
  • Klaus Rajewsky
  • Katja Steiger
  • Florian Bassermann
  • Roland Rad
  • Daniel Krappmann
  • Ingo Ringshausen
  • Marc Schmidt-Supprian

Journal

  • Leukemia

Quellenangabe

  • Leukemia

Zusammenfassung

  • Aberrant activation of NF-κB transcription factors is a hallmark of human lymphomas. Most lymphoma-intrinsic as well as microenvironment-induced NF-κB activation occurs upstream of the key kinase IKK2, therefore affecting additional pathways. Here, we show that canonical NF-κB signaling in mouse B cells, induced through the expression of one or two copies of a constitutively active IKK2 variant, dose-dependently drives lymphomagenesis. The observed phenotype and stereotypic B cell receptor clonality resemble human small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Stronger IKK2 signaling drives early B1a cell expansion and uniform SLL/CLL-like lymphomagenesis, while intermediate signals cause more heterogeneous malignancies. Mechanistically, constitutive IKK2 signals provide a profound cell-intrinsic competitive advantage to B1a cells and dose-dependently synergize with TCL1 overexpression in driving aggressive CLL. Further, strong constitutive NF-κB activation overcomes critical microenvironmental dependencies of TCL1-driven lymphomas. Our findings establish canonical NF-κB as an oncogenic driver in lymphoma and reveal reduced microenvironment dependency as a key NF-κB-mediated mechanism, thus highlighting its therapeutic relevance.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s41375-025-02844-8