In CD34+acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the malignant stem cells reside in the CD38+compartment. We have shown before that the frequency of such CD34+CD38-cells at diagnosis correlates with minimal residual disease (MRD) frequency after chemotherapy and with survival. Specific targeting of CD34+CD38+cells might thus offer therapeutic options. Previously, we found that C-type lectin-like molecule-1 (CLL-1) has high expression on the whole blast compartment in the majority of AML cases. We now show that CLL-1 expression is also present on the CD34+CD38-stem-cell compartment in AML (77/89 patients). The CD34+CLL-1+population, containing the CD34+CD38-CLL-1+cells, does engraft in nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID) mice with outgrowth to CLL-1+blasts. CLL-1 expression was not different between diagnosis and relapse (n = 9). In remission, both CLL-1-normal and CLL-1+malignant CD34+CD38-cells were present. A high CLL-1+fraction was associated with quick relapse. CLL-1 expression is completely absent both on CD34+CD38-cells in normal (n = 11) and in regenerating bone marrow controls (n = 6). This AML stem-cell specificity of the anti-CLL-1 antibody under all conditions of disease and the leukemia-initiating properties of CD34+CLL-1+cells indicate that anti-CLL-1 antibody enables both AML-specific stem-cell detection and possibly antigen-targeting in future.

doi.org/10.1182/blood-2007-03-083048, hdl.handle.net/1765/35173
Blood
Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam

van Rhenen, A., van Dongen, G., Kelder, A. L., Rombouts, E., Feller, N., Moshaver, B., … Schuurhuis, G. J. (2007). The novel AML stem cell-associated antigen CLL-1 aids in discrimination between normal and leukemic stem cells. Blood, 110(7), 2659–2666. doi:10.1182/blood-2007-03-083048