As discussed in this review, human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection in healthy individuals is associated with a variable and persistent increase of NK cells expressing the CD94/NKG2C activating receptor. The expansion of NKG2C+ NK cells reported in other infectious diseases is systematically associated with HCMV co-infection. The functionally mature NKG2Cbright NK-cell subset expanding in HCMV+ individuals displays inhibitory Ig-like receptors (KIR and LILRB1) specific for self HLA class I, and low levels of NKp46 and NKp30 activating receptors. Such reconfiguration of the NK-cell compartment appears particularly marked in immunocompromised patients and in children with symptomatic congenital infection, thus suggesting that its magnitude may be inversely related with the efficiency of the T-cell-mediated response. This effect of HCMV infection is reminiscent of the pattern of response of murine Ly49H+ NK cells against murine CMV (MCMV), and it has been hypothesized that a cognate interaction of the CD94/NKG2C receptor with HCMV-infected cells may drive the expansion of the corresponding NK-cell subset. Yet, the precise role of NKG2C+ cells in the control of HCMV infection, the molecular mechanisms underlying the NK-cell compartment redistribution, as well as its putative influence in the response to other pathogens and tumors remain open issues. © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
CITATION STYLE
Muntasell, A., Vilches, C., Angulo, A., & López-Botet, M. (2013, April). Adaptive reconfiguration of the human NK-cell compartment in response to cytomegalovirus: A different perspective of the host-pathogen interaction. European Journal of Immunology. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201243117
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