Heinig et al. (summarized by López‑Guerra et al.) identify CXCR5 as a primary chemokine receptor driving CLL cell entry into follicular niches and show follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) and LTαβ–LTβR signaling form a positive stromal–tumor loop that sustains proliferation in the Eμ‑TCL1 murine model — a robust preclinical demonstration but one constrained by model translation to human CLL
The CXCL13–CXCR5 axis is repeatedly implicated across diseases for organizing follicles and recruiting B/Tfh cells and tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS). The Heinig/Colomer work places CLL within that paradigm — tumor cells actively shape FDC-containing follicles through chemokine and LT signaling, analogous to TLS biology reported in cancer and autoimmunity (see later literature for TLS prognostic roles and CXCL13–CXCR5 function in human tissues).
Implication: mechanistic convergence with other fields suggests cross-disciplinary translational approaches (e.g., spatial transcriptomics and CXCL13 measurements in human CLL nodes; single-cell dissection of LTαβ sources).
Evidence in the Eμ‑TCL1 model is internally consistent and supports a mechanistic model where CXCR5 controls follicular entry and tumor‑stroma positive feedback (via LTαβ–LTβR → CXCL13) that sustains proliferation in proximity to FDCs. Confidence for the mechanism within the mouse model: moderate–high; confidence for human generalization: low–moderate until direct human tissue evidence is provided
Custom summaries of the latest cutting edge Science research. Every Friday. No Ads.