To the editor:

Jones and colleagues described 2 Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) cell lines that contain small subpopulations of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH)+CD20+CD30Igλ+ B cells, which have clonogenic potential and give rise to the typical CD30+ Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells.1  Importantly, the authors also reported that in the peripheral blood (PB) of HL patients, ALDHhigh cells are detectable, that are often clonally related to the HRS cells. These cells may represent HL-initiating cells, perhaps cancer stem cells.

First indications for the existence of HRS cell clone members among small CD30, morphologically normal cells were reported 10 years ago. In several HL the same numerical chromosomal abnormalities were present in HRS cells and in some small (CD30) cells.2,3  However, such abnormalities are not the best clonal markers in HL.4  In another study of HL with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)+ HRS cells, CD30 small EBV+ lymphocytes in the HL lymph nodes were not (with perhaps rare exceptions) members of the HRS clone.5  As HRS cells show a clonal EBV infection pattern, putative CD30 clone members should also be EBV-infected. Thus, members of the HRS cell clone are usually absent among CD30 B cells, at least in EBV+ cases. Vockerodt and colleagues analyzed multiple PB and bone marrow samples from 2 HL patients, using a highly sensitive HRS cell clone–specific PCR, but HRS cell–specific amplificates were undetectable.6  Hence, clonotypic cells were very infrequent or absent in the PB of these patients.

Jones and coworkers present 3 pieces of evidence that clonotypic B cells are present in the PB of HL patients among ALDHhighCD27+CD19+ B cells.1  However, none of these is convincing. First, in the heavy chain fragment length analysis, the isolated HRS cell population surprisingly gave a polyclonal pattern with many fragments of different lengths, so that also seeing 2 bands with the same length as those obtained from the PB B cells does not prove clonal identity. Second, the fragment length analysis of Vκ light chain rearrangements is unsuitable to demonstrate clonal identity, because the V-J joints of light chain rearrangements show little length variation; 66% of polyclonal VκJκ joints have an identical CDRIII length of 27 bp.7  Third, sequences of V(D)J joints are principally an ideal clonal marker for B cells. However, the VκJκ sequences obtained from HRS cells and PB ALDHhighCD27+CD19+ B cells surprisingly stop 5′ of the V-J joint, so that their potential clonal relationship is not demonstrated. The pattern of somatic mutations in the sequences actually argues against a clonal relationship: as V genes in HRS cells show nearly never intraclonal diversity,8  the finding of different mutations only in the Vκ sequences from the HRS and PB B cells suggests that the latter do not carry the clonotypic V gene rearrangement of the HRS cells.

It will also be important in future studies to clarify whether indeed only the CD30 cells in HL cell lines have clonogenic potential, because small mononuclear CD30+ Hodgkin cells were not analyzed separately from large multinuclear Reed-Sternberg cells, and mononuclear Hodgkin cells have a high proliferative potential.9  Moreover, it will be critical to determine whether B cells in the PB with clonotypic rearrangements—if their existence can be confirmed—are members of the malignant HRS cell clone or represent premalignant B cells that persisted in the patients.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author declares no competing financial interests.

Correspondence: Ralf Küppers, Institute of Cell Biology (Cancer Research), Medical School, University of Duisburg-Essen, Virchowstrasse 173, 45122 Essen, Germany; e-mail: ralf.kueppers@uk-essen.de.

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