In his letter to the editor, Dr Küppers calls attention to additional support that clonotypic B cells are present in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and may represent HL stem cells. We were unaware of Jansen and colleagues' prior work describing such cells in HL lymph nodes,1,2  and we thank Dr Küppers for pointing out this further evidence. We regret the oversight; we certainly were never trying to imply that our data were the first in this area, as we cited the 1988 paper by Newcom et al3  describing these cells in an HL cell line. However, our description of these cells in the blood, and their potential as targets for CD20-directed therapy, remain novel findings.4 

Dr Küppers then shifts gears and declares that “none of these [data] are convincing. First … the isolated HRS cell population surprisingly gave a polyclonal pattern … .” He is referring to Figure 5C, where the predominant clonal immunoglobulin gene rearrangement in Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells is accompanied by a polyclonal background. As Dr Küppers' group showed,5  HRS cells isolated by magnetic cell separation columns are highly contaminated with other blood cells.4  Dr Küppers further dismisses the clonality demonstrated in the microdissected HRS cells by Vκ light chain rearrangements (Figure 5D) stating that “ … the fragment length analysis of Vκ light chain rearrangements is unsuitable to demonstrate clonal identity, because the V-J joints … show little length variation; 66% of polyclonal VκJκ joints have an identical CDRIII length of 27 bp.” Length analysis of Vκ light chain rearrangements is a standard, commonly used method for the identification of B-cell clonality6  and may be more robust than heavy chain rearrangements.7  Whereas the kappa light chain V region repertoire is more limited than that of the immunoglobulin heavy chain, our laboratory and others obtain a typical polyclonal distribution of peaks for normal tissues using the methods described. Specifically, the modal peak in our normal controls falls at 148 bp, which differs significantly from the clonal peaks at 146 and 150 bp.

Dr Küppers is correct that the VκJκ sequences in supplemental Figure 3 do not cover the entire CDR3 region. The direct sequencing of the limited HRS cell material available did not provide quality sequence into the Jκ region. However, the Vκ region identified (Vκ1) is relatively infrequently found in HRS cells,8  making coincidental rearrangements unlikely. Dr Küppers' suggestion that intraclonal heterogeneity “nearly never” occurs is overstated. In fact, his own group9  and others8  reported intraclonal heterogeneity of the HRS cells in about 10% of cases. Notably, we sequenced small pools of microdissected HRS cells (400-500) rather than single microdissected cells; this may provide greater ability to detect intraclonal heterogeneity than single-cell microdissection.

We agree with Dr Küppers' final comments that more work on the topic of clonotypic B cells in HL is needed. We hope that our recent paper4  and discussions such as these letters to the editor will spark interest in a topic that has largely been ignored or dismissed despite work from several groups1-3  (eg, before our paper, the report by Newcom et al3  had been cited by others just once in the 21 years since its publication). Better understanding the association of clonotypic B cells and HRS cells in HL may have important implications not only for HL but also perhaps more broadly to the field of cancer stem cells.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Correspondence: Richard J. Jones, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Bunting-Blaustein CRB, Rm 244, 1650 Orleans St, Baltimore, MD 21231; e-mail: rjjones@jhmi.edu.

1
Jansen
 
MP
Hopman
 
AH
Haesevoets
 
AM
, et al. 
Chromosomal abnormalities in Hodgkin's disease are not restricted to Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg cells.
J Pathol
1998
, vol. 
185
 
2
(pg. 
145
-
152
)
2
Jansen
 
MP
Hopman
 
AH
Bot
 
FJ
, et al. 
Morphologically normal, CD30-negative B-lymphocytes with chromosome aberrations in classical Hodgkin's disease: the progenitor cell of the malignant clone?
J Pathol
1999
, vol. 
189
 
4
(pg. 
527
-
532
)
3
Newcom
 
SR
Kadin
 
ME
Phillips
 
C
L-428 Reed-Sternberg cells and mononuclear Hodgkin's cells arise from a single cloned mononuclear cell.
Int J Cell Cloning
1988
, vol. 
6
 
6
(pg. 
417
-
431
)
4
Jones
 
RJ
Gocke
 
CD
Kasamon
 
YL
, et al. 
Circulating clonotypic B cells in classic Hodgkin lymphoma.
Blood
2009
, vol. 
113
 
23
(pg. 
5920
-
5926
)
5
Irsch
 
J
Nitsch
 
S
Hansmann
 
ML
, et al. 
Isolation of viable Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells from Hodgkin disease tissues.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
1998
, vol. 
95
 
17
(pg. 
10117
-
10122
)
6
van Dongen
 
JJ
Langerak
 
AW
Bruggemann
 
M
, et al. 
Design and standardization of PCR primers and protocols for detection of clonal immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor gene recombinations in suspect lymphoproliferations: report of the BIOMED-2 Concerted Action BMH4-CT98-3936.
Leukemia
2003
, vol. 
17
 
12
(pg. 
2257
-
2317
)
7
Halldorsdottir
 
AM
Zehnbauer
 
BA
Burack
 
WR
Application of BIOMED-2 clonality assays to formalin-fixed paraffin embedded follicular lymphoma specimens: superior performance of the IGK assays compared to IGH for suboptimal specimens.
Leuk Lymphoma
2007
, vol. 
48
 
7
(pg. 
1338
-
1343
)
8
Marafioti
 
T
Hummel
 
M
Foss
 
HD
, et al. 
Hodgkin and reed-sternberg cells represent an expansion of a single clone originating from a germinal center B-cell with functional immunoglobulin gene rearrangements but defective immunoglobulin transcription.
Blood
2000
, vol. 
95
 
4
(pg. 
1443
-
1450
)
9
Kanzler
 
H
Kuppers
 
R
Hansmann
 
ML
Rajewsky
 
K
Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells in Hodgkin's disease represent the outgrowth of a dominant tumor clone derived from (crippled) germinal center B cells.
J Exp Med
1996
, vol. 
184
 
4
(pg. 
1495
-
1505
)

National Institutes of Health

Sign in via your Institution