The serine protease granzyme M is preferentially expressed in NK-cell, gamma delta T-cell, and intestinal T-cell lymphomas: evidence of origin from lymphocytes involved in innate immunity.

Journal: Blood
Published:
Abstract

Granzyme M (GM) is a novel serine protease whose expression is highly restricted to natural killer (NK) cells, CD3(+)CD56(+) T cells, and gamma delta T cells. Using a GM-specific monoclonal antibody, we analyzed the expression of GM in 214 mature T-cell and NK-cell lymphomas. GM was preferentially expressed in nasal NK/T-cell lymphomas (100%), gamma delta T-cell lymphomas (100%), and intestinal T-cell lymphomas (85%). In contrast, GM expression was present at low prevalence in mycosis fungoides/Sézary syndrome (3%), anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (6%), panniculitis-like T-cell lymphoma (11%), and angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (0%) cases. Peripheral T-cell lymphomas of unspecified subtype showed an intermediate frequency (37%) of GM expression, consistent with their heterogeneous origin. We conclude that GM expression is a distinctive feature of the nasal NK/T-cell, gamma delta T-cell, and intestinal T-cell lymphomas, and suggest that these tumors develop from lymphocytes involved in innate immunity.

Authors
Laszlo Krenacs, Mark Smyth, Eniko Bagdi, Tibor Krenacs, Laszlo Kopper, Thomas Rudiger, Andreas Zettl, Hans Muller Hermelink, Elaine Jaffe, Mark Raffeld