Abstract
DC are the most efficient antigen-presenting cells that regulate the immune response. Here, we demonstrate the expression of NK cell receptor protein-2 (NKR-P2) on rat and mouse DC, and we show that NKR-P2 gets reorganized upon antigen contact. DC activated with anti-NKR-P2 mAb exhibit enhanced apoptotic killing of tumor targets, whereas blocking the interaction between NKR-P2 and its ligand with rNKR-P2 abrogated apoptotic killing, suggesting NKR-P2 to function as an activating molecule on DC. In vivo injection of anti-NKR-P2 mAb augmented DC activity and delayed tumor progression. NKR-P2 signaling involved Ca2+ influx, culminating in the expression of the apoptosis-inducing molecule, TNF-α. Taken together, these observations suggest that NKR-P2 (the rat orthologue of human NKG2D) acts as a target-recognition molecule on DC. © 2004 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.
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Alli, R., Savithri, B., Das, S., Varalakshmi, C., Rangaraj, N., & Khar, A. (2004). Involvement of NKR-P2/NKG2D in DC-mediated killing of tumor targets: Indicative of a common, innate, target-recognition paradigm? European Journal of Immunology, 34(4), 1119–1126. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.200324793
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