Unique Subpopulations of CD56+ NK and NK-T Peripheral Blood Lymphocytes Identified by Chemokine Receptor Expression Repertoire

  • Campbell J
  • Qin S
  • Unutmaz D
  • et al.
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Abstract

CD56, an adhesion molecule closely related to neual cell adhesion molecule, is an immunophenotypic marker for several unique populations of PBLs. Although CD56+ cells derive from multiple lymphocyte lineages, they share a role in immunosurveillance and antitumor responses. We have studied the chemokine receptor expression patterns and functional migratory responses of three distinct CD56+ populations from human peripheral blood. NK-T cells were found to differ greatly from NK cells, and CD16+ NK cells from CD16− NK cells. CD16+ NK cells were the predominant population responding to IL-8 and fractalkine, whereas NK-T cells were the predominant population responding to the CCR5 ligand macrophage-inflammatory protein-1β. CD16− NK cells were the only CD56+ population that uniformly expressed trafficking molecules necessary for homing into secondary lymphoid organs through high endothelial venule. These findings describe a diverse population of cells that may have trafficking patterns entirely different from each other, and from other lymphocyte types.

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Campbell, J. J., Qin, S., Unutmaz, D., Soler, D., Murphy, K. E., Hodge, M. R., … Butcher, E. C. (2001). Unique Subpopulations of CD56+ NK and NK-T Peripheral Blood Lymphocytes Identified by Chemokine Receptor Expression Repertoire. The Journal of Immunology, 166(11), 6477–6482. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.166.11.6477

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