Expansions of adaptive-like NK cells with a tissue-resident phenotype in human lung and blood

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Abstract

Human adaptive-like "memory" CD56dimCD16+natural killer (NK) cells in peripheral blood from cytomegalovirus-seropositive individuals have been extensively investigated in recent years and are currently explored as a treatment strategy for hematological cancers. However, treatment of solid tumors remains limited due to insufficient NK cell tumor infiltration, and it is unknown whether large expansions of adaptive-like NK cells that are equipped for tissue residency and tumor homing exist in peripheral tissues. Here, we show that human lung and blood contains adaptivelike CD56brightCD16-NK cells with hallmarks of tissue residency, including expression of CD49a. Expansions of adaptive-like lung tissue-resident NK (trNK) cells were found to be present independently of adaptive-like CD56dimCD16+NK cells and to be hyperresponsive toward target cells. Together, our data demonstrate that phenotypically, functionally, and developmentally distinct subsets of adaptive-like NK cells exist in human lung and blood. Given their tissue-related character and hyperresponsiveness, human lung adaptive-like trNK cells might represent a suitable alternative for therapies targeting solid tumors.

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Brownlie, D., Scharenberg, M., Mold, J. E., Hard, J., Kekalainen, E., Buggert, M., … Michaelsson, J. (2021). Expansions of adaptive-like NK cells with a tissue-resident phenotype in human lung and blood. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(11). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2016580118

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