Reprogramming of stroma-derived chemokine networks drives the loss of tissue organization in nodal B cell lymphoma
Authors
- Felix Czernilofsky
- Anna Mathioudaki
- Lea Jopp-Saile
- Raphael Lutz
- Dominik Vonficht
- Xi Wang
- Christina Schniederjohann
- Harald Voehringer
- Tobias Roider
- Marc-Andrea Baertsch
- Claus Rodemer
- Henry Löffler-Wirth
- Michael Grau
- Donnacha Fitzgerald
- Johannes Mammen
- Jan Kosla
- Nora Liebers
- Peter-Martin Bruch
- Diana Ordoñez-Rueda
- Alexander Brobeil
- Gunhild Mechtersheimer
- Caroline Pabst
- Carsten Müller-Tidow
- Andreas Trumpp
- Marc Seifert
- Frank Neumann
- Mathias Heikenwälder
- Vladimir Benes
- Wolfgang Huber
- Jörg Distler
- Georg Lenz
- Hans Binder
- Reiner Siebert
- Garry P. Nolan
- Moritz Gerstung
- Judith B. Zaugg
- Daniel Hübschmann
- Simon Haas
- Sascha Dietrich
Journal
- Nature Cancer
Citation
- Nat Cancer 7 (3): 538-552
Abstract
Lymph node (LN) function requires the organization of cells into higher-order spatial units. However, the principles governing LN architecture in health and disease remain poorly understood. Here, we used single-cell and spatial mapping to investigate the mechanisms directing immune cell organization in human LNs and its disruption in architecturally distinct lymphoma entities: indolent follicular lymphoma (FL) and aggressive diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Our data substantiate the central role of LN-resident stromal cells in chemokine-driven lymphocyte zonation and reveal an inflammatory feedback loop fueled by tumor-reactive T cells that triggers stromal remodeling, progressive loss of homeostatic chemokine gradients, and tissue disorganization from a non-malignant state to FL and DLBCL. Loss of homeostatic chemokines was associated with adverse patient survival, identifying the underlying architectural rearrangement as a key event during lymphomagenesis. Collectively, our results highlight the principles of LN organization and suggest how lymphoma-induced microenvironmental reprogramming drives the loss of tissue organization.