Cancers (Jun 2021)

B-Helper Neutrophils in Regional Lymph Nodes Correlate with Improved Prognosis in Patients with Head and Neck Cancer

  • Ekaterina Pylaeva,
  • Irem Ozel,
  • Anthony Squire,
  • Ilona Spyra,
  • Charlotte Wallner,
  • Magdalena Korek,
  • Georg Korschunow,
  • Maksim Domnich,
  • Elena Siakaeva,
  • Moritz Goetz,
  • Agnes Bankfalvi,
  • Stephan Lang,
  • Benjamin Kansy,
  • Jadwiga Jablonska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13123092
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
p. 3092

Abstract

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The role of neutrophils during cancer formation and elimination is diverse. Here, for the first time, we investigate neutrophil helper cells (NBH), their influence on B cell activity in the regional lymph nodes (RLN) of head-and-neck cancer patients and the effect of this neutrophil/B cell interaction on patient prognosis. Circulating and RLN neutrophils of patients with stage I–IV head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma were investigated with flow cytometry and qPCR. In addition, neutrophil/B cell co-localization in RLNs was evaluated using immunohistochemistry. B cell proliferation was assessed and correlated with the distance to neutrophils. Patient survival was evaluated. Neutrophils with the helper cell phenotype were identified in the RLN of HNC patients. B cells in close proximity to such NBH showed significantly higher proliferation rates, together with elevated activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) expression. Notably, patient survival was significantly higher in individuals with high NBH frequencies in the B follicles of RLNs. Neutrophils in RLN can support T cell-independent activation of the adaptive immune system through B cell stimulation, capturing helper cell phenotype character. The presence of such helper neutrophils in the RLNs of HNC patients positively correlates with patient prognosis.

Keywords