Agricultural pesticide exposure and the molecular connection to lymphomagenesis

Author:

Agopian Julie1,Navarro Jean-Marc1,Gac Anne-Claire2,Lecluse Yannick2,Briand Mélanie2,Grenot Pierre1,Gauduchon Pascal2,Ruminy Philippe3,Lebailly Pierre2,Nadel Bertrand1,Roulland Sandrine1

Affiliation:

1. Centre d'Immunologie de Marseille-Luminy, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U631, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique UMR6102, Université de la Méditerranée, 13288 Marseilles, France

2. Groupe Régional d'Etudes sur le Cancer EA1772, IFR 146, Centre François Baclesse, 14076 Caen, France

3. INSERM U918, Groupe d'étude des Proliférations Lymphoïdes, IFRMP23, 76038 Rouen, France

Abstract

The t(14;18) translocation constitutes the initiating event of a causative cascade leading to follicular lymphoma (FL). t(14;18) translocations are present in blood from healthy individuals, but there is a trend of increased prevalence in farmers exposed to pesticides, a group recently associated with higher risk of t(14;18)+ non-Hodgkin's lymphoma development. A direct connection between agricultural pesticide use, t(14;18) in blood, and malignant progression, however, has not yet been demonstrated. We followed t(14;18) clonal evolution over 9 yr in a cohort of farmers exposed to pesticides. We show that exposed individuals bear particularly high t(14;18) frequencies in blood because of a dramatic clonal expansion of activated t(14;18)+ B cells. We further demonstrate that such t(14;18)+ clones recapitulate the hallmark features of developmentally blocked FL cells, with some displaying aberrant activation-induced cytidine deaminase activity linked to malignant progression. Collectively, our data establish that expanded t(14;18)+ clones constitute bona fide precursors at various stages of FL development, and provide a molecular connection between agricultural pesticide exposure, t(14;18) frequency in blood, and clonal progression.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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