Recruitment of activation receptors at inhibitory NK cell immune synapses

34Citations
Citations of this article
63Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cell activation receptors accumulate by an actin-edependent process at cytotoxic immune synapses where they provide synergistic signals that trigger NK cell effector functions. In contrast, NK cell inhibitory receptors, including members of the MHC class I-specific killer cell lg-like receptor (KIR) family, accumulate at inhibitory immune synapses, block actin dynamics, and prevent actin-dependent phosphorylation of activation receptors. Therefore, one would predict inhibition of actin-dependent accumulation of activation receptors when inhibitory receptors are engaged. By confocal imaging of primary human NK cells in contact with target cells expressing physiological ligands of NK cell receptors, we show here that this prediction is incorrect. Target cells included a human cell line and transfected Drosophila insect cells that expressed ligands of NK cell activation receptors in combination with an MHC class I ligand of inhibitory KIR. The two NK cell activation receptors CD2 and 2B4 accumulated and co-localized with KIR at inhibitory immune synapses. In fact, KIR promoted CD2 and 284 clustering, as CD2 and 2B4 accumulated more efficiently at inhibitory synapset in contrast, accumulation of KIR and of activation receptors at inhibitory synapses correlated with reduced density of the integrin LFA-1. These results imply that inhibitory KIR does not prevent CD2 and 2B4 signaling by blocking their accumulation at NK cell immune synapses, but by blocking their ability to signal within inhibitory synapses.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Schleinitz, N., March, M. E., & Long, E. O. (2008). Recruitment of activation receptors at inhibitory NK cell immune synapses. PLoS ONE, 3(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003278

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free