AUTHOR=Meyer Melissa A. , Dinh Huy Q. , Alimadadi Ahmad , Araujo Daniel J. , Chatterjee Nandini , Gutierrez Norma A. , Zhu Yanfang Peipei , Hunter Emma L. , Liang Shu , Seumois Gregory , Kiosses William B. , Catz Sergio D. , Vijayanand Pandurangan , Ottensmeier Christian , Hedrick Catherine C. TITLE=Human CD79b+ neutrophils in the blood are associated with early-stage melanoma JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=14 YEAR=2023 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1224045 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2023.1224045 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=Purpose

Due to their abundance in the blood, low RNA content, and short lifespan, neutrophils have been classically considered to be one homogenous pool. However, recent work has found that mature neutrophils and neutrophil progenitors are composed of unique subsets exhibiting context-dependent functions. In this study, we ask if neutrophil heterogeneity is associated with melanoma incidence and/or disease stage.

Experimental design

Using mass cytometry, we profiled melanoma patient blood for unique cell surface markers among neutrophils. Markers were tested for their predictiveness using flow cytometry data and random forest machine learning.

Results

We identified CD79b+ neutrophils (CD3-CD56-CD19-Siglec8-CD203c-CD86LoCD66b+CD79b+) that are normally restricted to the bone marrow in healthy humans but appear in the blood of subjects with early-stage melanoma. Further, we found CD79b+ neutrophils present in tumors of subjects with head and neck cancer. AI-mediated machine learning analysis of neutrophils from subjects with melanoma confirmed that CD79b expression among peripheral blood neutrophils is highly important in identifying melanoma incidence. We noted that CD79b+ neutrophils possessed a neutrophilic appearance but have transcriptional and surface-marker phenotypes reminiscent of B cells. Compared to remaining blood neutrophils, CD79b+ neutrophils are primed for NETosis, express higher levels of antigen presentation-related proteins, and have an increased capacity for phagocytosis.

Conclusion

Our work suggests that CD79b+ neutrophils are associated with early-stage melanoma.