Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells are characterized by the ability to kill cells that lack HLA class I molecules while sparing autologous normal (HLA class I+) cells. However, patients with transporter-associated antigen processing (TAP) deficiency, though displaying strong reductions of HLA class I surface expression, in most instances do not experience NK-mediated autoimmune phenomena. A possible mechanism by which TAP-/- NK cells avoid autoreactivity against autologous HLA class I-deficient cells could be based on either quantitative or qualitative defects of surface receptors involved in NK cell triggering. In this study we show that NK cells derived from 2 patients with TAP2-/- express normal levels of all known triggering receptors. As revealed by the analysis of polyclonal and clonal NK cells, these receptors display normal functional capabilities and allow the killing of a panel of NK-susceptible targets, including autologous B-LCLs. On the other hand, TAP2-/- NK cells were unable to kill either allogeneic (HLA class I+) or autologous (HLA class I-) phytohemagglutinin (PHA) blasts even in the presence of anti-HLA class I monoclonal antibody. These data suggest that TAP2-/- NK cells express still unknown inhibitory receptor(s) capable of down-regulating the NK cell cytotoxicity on binding to surface ligand(s) expressed by T cell blasts. Functional analyses, both at the polyclonal and at the clonal level, are consistent with the concept that the putative inhibitory receptor is expressed by virtually all TAP2-/- NK cells, whereas it is present only in rare NK cells from healthy persons. Another possibility would be that TAP2-/- NK cells are missing a still unidentified triggering receptor involved in NK cell-mediated killing of PHA blasts. © 2002 by The American Society of Hematology.
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CITATION STYLE
Vitale, M., Zimmer, J., Castriconi, R., Hanau, D., Donato, L., Bottino, C., … Moretta, A. (2002). Analysis of natural killer cells in TAP2-deficient patients: Expression of functional triggering receptors and evidence for the existence of inhibitory receptor(s) that prevent lysis of normal autologous cells. Blood, 99(5), 1723–1729. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.V99.5.1723
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