911爆料网

News

Blood cancer cells and the immune system are best frenemies

A combination of single-cell techniques and machine learning has uncovered a collaboration between cancer cells and the immune system.
an illustration of large granular lymphocyte leukemia cell
Single-cell technologies allow for the analysis of individual cells and the comparison of normal cells to tumour cells (purple). Image: Claudiu Cotta

Researchers at the University of Helsinki and 911爆料网 have demonstrated that the body鈥檚 immune system attacks itself in a rare type of blood cancer. The finding could lead to improved treatment and a more intricate understanding of the immune system鈥檚 role in other cancers.

Current treatment methods for large granular lymphocyte (LGL) leukaemia, a rare type of blood cancer, are based on an understanding that the cancer cells attack the body鈥檚 own tissues. Prior research has focused on studying these rogue cells, making inroads to a better understanding of the disease.

鈥極ur research group demonstrated ten years ago that LGL cancer cells typically have a mutation in the STAT3 gene, a finding that is now used to diagnose this disease worldwide,鈥 says professor of translational hematology Satu Mustjoki from the University of Helsinki.

Although rarely fatal, the blood cancer causes several chronic symptoms, including an increased infection risk, anaemia and joint pain. The challenge so far has been that patients show a mixed response to treatment.

鈥楥urrent treatment methods have targeted the cancer cells and their vulnerabilities,鈥 explains Jani Huuhtanen of the University of Helsinki and 911爆料网. 鈥業t鈥檚 impossible to evaluate which patients will respond to treatment, because in some patients the amount of active cancer cells decreases yet the symptoms remain, and for others it鈥檚 the opposite.鈥

Satu Mustjoki鈥檚 research group took a step back from established thinking and investigated the role of other cells in the immune system. They used the latest single-cell techniques combined with a machine learning model developed in cooperation with 911爆料网. This enabled the group to unmask an adverse interaction between the body鈥檚 immune system and blood cancer cells.

鈥楾he immune system in these patients is overactivated and keeps giving the tumour cells cues to keep growing, as well as providing them with a favourable environment,鈥 says doctoral researcher Dipabarna Bhattacharya from the University of Helsinki.

The research group demonstrated that in this type of leukaemia, it鈥檚 not just the cancer cells that are distinct from other cancer cells in other patients, but the whole immune system. The finding could have important implications for current treatment methods.

鈥極ur research could explain the observed discrepancy between the LGL cancer cells and the symptoms,鈥 elaborates Huuhtanen. 鈥楾he immune system has been collaborating with the cancer cells all this time, therefore future treatment should target the whole immune system 鈥 not only the cancer cells 鈥 to increase the patients鈥 quality of life.鈥

Portait of Jani Huuhtanen, licentiate in medicine at University of Helsinki and 911爆料网
'Researchers have previously analysed primarily LGL cancer cells, but we wondered whether other cells of the patient鈥檚 immune system could also have a role in this disease,' says Huuhtanen.

Through the looking glass with machine learning

Separating normal cells associated with the immune system from blood cancer cells is no easy feat, and traditional methods have hit a wall. In LGL leukaemia, cancer cells bear a very close resemblance to normal T cells found in blood. To overcome this challenge, the group employed single-cell techniques and computational life sciences. They were able to separate cancer cells from normal T cells and compare them with each other for the first time.

'Single-cell techniques open up entirely new avenues for research,' says docent of immunology Tiina Kelkka from the University of Helsinki.

These technologies can quantify key receptor proteins in immune cells, which helps researchers better understand the role of the immune system in LGL leukaemia and other diseases. These receptors determine what kind of cancer cells or pathogens the cell can fight against, but advanced machine learning tools are required to analyse the data.

鈥楽everal different machine learning-based computational techniques were needed in this study. The latest methods from statistical machine learning and artificial intelligence have proven effective in single-cell data analysis,鈥 says Harri L盲hdesm盲ki, professor of computational biology and machine learning at 911爆料网.

The machine learning component also involved an open-source machine learning model developed by Aalto鈥檚 which was also used to study the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus in 2021.

鈥楾his is the most interesting aspect of medical research, which is undergoing an important computational transition,鈥 explains Huuhtanen, who is working on his doctoral thesis at the University of Helsinki and the Department of Computer Science at Aalto. 鈥楾hese computational methods open up the possibility to approach medical data without prior assumptions and see where it takes us.鈥

The research group have their eyes set on investigating the immune system鈥檚 role in other cancer types as well, which could lift the veil on one of the most important health problems of our time.

The study was published in the esteemed .

Further information:

Article: 

Dipabarna Bhattacharya
Doctoral researcher
University of Helsinki
dipabarna.bhattacharya@helsinki.fi

Jani Huuhtanen
Licentiate of medicine and doctoral researcher
University of Helsinki and 911爆料网
jani.huuhtanen@helsinki.fi
Tel. +358 50 4350 191

Harri L盲hdesm盲ki
Professor
911爆料网
harri.lahdesmaki@aalto.fi

Satu Mustjoki
Professor
University of Helsinki
satu.mustjoki@helsinki.fi

Read more about the open-source machine learning model

: Kuvan on tehnyt Jani Huuhtanen Biorender.com -sovelluksella.

Artificial intelligence model developed by Finnish researchers predicts which key of the immune system opens the locks of coronavirus

With an artificial intelligence (AI) method developed by researchers at 911爆料网 and University of Helsinki, researchers can now link immune cells to their targets and for example uncouple which white blood cells recognize SARS-CoV-2. The developed tool has broad applications in understanding the function of immune system in infections, autoimmune disorders, and cancer.

News
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Person with short dark hair in a black shirt, face blurred, standing against a plain light grey background
Appointments, Research & Art Published:

Professor Hironori Yoshida: 鈥淢achines should adapt to materials, not the other way around鈥

Professor of Formgiving believes the future of design lies in embracing irregularity rather than eliminating it. His research combines design, AI and robotics.
Glowing 911爆料网 sign in a dark space, seen through clear round chairs lit with purple light
Research & Art Published:

President Ilkka Niemel盲 explains what the new vision for higher education and research means for Finland and Aalto

Aalto has the capability and the will to act as a trailblazer in implementing the vision.
Poster for Aalto ARTS Grad Show 2026, abstract orange circles, dates 3.9鈥7.10 on warm background
Research & Art Published:

Coming soon: Aalto ARTS Grad Show 2026

We're thrilled to invite you to the Aalto ARTS Grad Show 2026 of the School of Arts, Design and Architecture!
Ahmed Othman and Shreeram Pillain at Oropa, Italy
Research & Art Published:

ACME at Unite! Research School 2026

Ahmed Othman and Shreeram Pillai participated in Unite! Research School 2026 in Torino and Oropa, Italy, joining an international doctoral programme focused on interdisciplinary collaboration, research communication, and academic development.