九游体育

Journal News

九游体育: When mitochondria make B cells go bad

John Arnst
Feb. 1, 2018

B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia, or B-CLL, is the most common type of leukemia in adults and primarily affects elderly patients. The disease results from a patient’s bone marrow overproducing immature lymphocytes, a form of white blood cells that fight infections less effectively than their healthy counterparts but survive longer, ultimately overwhelming them and spreading unchecked. Unlike acute leukemia, B-CLL can take several years to cause problems for a patient, but it is less responsive to chemotherapy.

When mitochondria, highlighted here in cow cells, suffer age-related oxidative damage, they can give rise to chronic lymphocytic leukemia.courtesy of Torsten Wittmann, University of California, San Francisco

While novel treatments have been developed in recent years, they only target the B cells once they’ve mutated to an immature, cancerous state. To develop treatments for B-CLL that might prevent B cells from becoming cancerous in the first place, researchers led by Christopher Gerner at the and have performed a comprehensive proteomics analysis of B-CLL cells and mature B cells in young and elderly patients. They described their work in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

“It could be nice to not only target the cancer cells, but those cells prone to becoming cancer cells,” Gerner said. “What we actually saw when we compared the young and the elderly donors was a very clear signature of mitochondrial stress and metabolic stress.”

Gerner and colleagues found that B-CLL cells have an increased expression of stem cell-associated molecules and a reduced expression of tumor-suppressing molecules and stress-related serotonin transporters as well as an observed increase in glutamine consumption and beta-oxidation of fatty acid.

This indicated that reactive oxidative species, which are carcinogenic and cause damage to cells, were being upregulated, Gerner said, which would explain why the incidence of mutations that lead to B-CLL increases with age. The researchers hope that the alterations in regulation also may provide a proteomic signature for immunosenescence, the immune system’s natural weakening with age.

Gerner and his fellow researchers plan to continue this research by performing their proteomic analysis on blood samples taken from greater numbers of healthy elderly people and B-CLL patients to ultimatelybe able to test when mitochondria have become predisposed for the disease.

“The pressure on those cells was simply different … and this pressure is something I would like to detect and measure in patients,” Gerner said. “That would be the ultimate aim.”

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
John Arnst

John Arnst was a science writer for ASBMB Today.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Targeting toxins to treat whooping cough
Journal News

Targeting toxins to treat whooping cough

May 1, 2025

Scientists find that liver protein inhibits of pertussis toxin, offering a potential new treatment for bacterial respiratory disease. Read more about this recent study from the Journal of Biological Chemistry.

Elusive zebrafish enzyme in lipid secretion
Journal News

Elusive zebrafish enzyme in lipid secretion

May 1, 2025

Scientists discover that triacylglycerol synthesis enzyme drives lipoproteins secretion rather than lipid droplet storage. Read more about this recent study from the Journal of Biological Chemistry.

Scientists identify pan-cancer biomarkers
Journal News

Scientists identify pan-cancer biomarkers

April 30, 2025

Researchers analyze protein and RNA data across 13 cancer types to find similarities that could improve cancer staging, prognosis and treatment strategies. Read about this recent article published in Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

New mass spectrometry tool accurately identifies bacteria
Journal News

New mass spectrometry tool accurately identifies bacteria

April 30, 2025

Scientists develop a software tool to categorize microbe species and antibiotic resistance markers to aid clinical and environmental research. Read about this recent article published in Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

New tool matches microbial and metabolic metaproteomic data
Journal News

New tool matches microbial and metabolic metaproteomic data

April 30, 2025

Scientists develop a bioinformatics program that maps omics data to metabolic pathways. Read about this recent article published in Molecular & Cellular Proteomics

Meet Paul Shapiro
Interview

Meet Paul Shapiro

April 29, 2025

Learn how the JBC associate editor went from milking cows on a dairy farm to analyzing kinases in the lab.