GNA13 loss in germinal center B cells leads to impaired apoptosis and promotes lymphoma in vivo.
Jane A HealyAdrienne NugentRachel E RempelAndrea B MoffittNicholas S DavisXiaoyu JiangJennifer R ShingletonJenny ZhangCassandra LoveJyotishka DattaMatthew E McKinneyTiffany J TzengNina WettschureckStefan OffermannsKatelyn A WalzerJen-Tsan ChiSuhail Ahmed Kabeer RasheedPatrick J CaseyIzidore S LossosSandeep S DavePublished in: Blood (2016)
GNA13 is the most frequently mutated gene in germinal center (GC)-derived B-cell lymphomas, including nearly a quarter of Burkitt lymphoma and GC-derived diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. These mutations occur in a pattern consistent with loss of function. We have modeled the GNA13-deficient state exclusively in GC B cells by crossing the Gna13 conditional knockout mouse strain with the GC-specific AID-Cre transgenic strain. AID-Cre(+) GNA13-deficient mice demonstrate disordered GC architecture and dark zone/light zone distribution in vivo, and demonstrate altered migration behavior, decreased levels of filamentous actin, and attenuated RhoA activity in vitro. We also found that GNA13-deficient mice have increased numbers of GC B cells that display impaired caspase-mediated cell death and increased frequency of somatic hypermutation in the immunoglobulin VH locus. Lastly, GNA13 deficiency, combined with conditional MYC transgene expression in mouse GC B cells, promotes lymphomagenesis. Thus, GNA13 loss is associated with GC B-cell persistence, in which impaired apoptosis and ongoing somatic hypermutation may lead to an increased risk of lymphoma development.