Epigenetic Plasticity Enables CNS-Trafficking of EBV-infected B Lymphocytes

Author:

Soldan Samantha S.ORCID,Su Chenhe,Lamontagne R. JasonORCID,Grams NicholasORCID,Lu Fang,Zhang Yue,Gesualdi James D.ORCID,Frase Drew M.ORCID,Tolvinski Lois E.ORCID,Martin Kayla,Messick Troy E.ORCID,Fingerut Jonathan T.ORCID,Koltsova Ekaterina,Kossenkov AndrewORCID,Lieberman Paul M.ORCID

Abstract

Subpopulations of B-lymphocytes traffic to different sites and organs to provide diverse and tissue-specific functions. Here, we provide evidence that epigenetic differences confer a neuroinvasive phenotype. An EBV+ B cell lymphoma cell line (M14) with low frequency trafficking to the CNS was neuroadapted to generate a highly neuroinvasive B-cell population (MUN14). MUN14 B cells efficiently infiltrated the CNS within one week and produced neurological pathologies. We compared the gene expression profiles of viral and cellular genes using RNA-Seq and identified one viral (EBNA1) and several cellular gene candidates, including secreted phosphoprotein 1/osteopontin (SPP1/OPN), neuron navigator 3 (NAV3), CXCR4, and germinal center-associated signaling and motility protein (GCSAM) that were selectively upregulated in MUN14. ATAC-Seq and ChIP-qPCR revealed that these gene expression changes correlated with epigenetic changes at gene regulatory elements. The neuroinvasive phenotype could be attenuated with a neutralizing antibody to OPN, confirming the functional role of this protein in trafficking EBV+ B cells to the CNS. These studies indicate that B-cell trafficking to the CNS can be acquired by epigenetic adaptations and provide a new model to study B-cell neuroinvasion associated CNS lymphoma and autoimmune disease of the CNS, including multiple sclerosis (MS).

Funder

National Cancer Institute

National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

National Institutes of Health

Leukemia-Lymphoma Society

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Virology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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