Abstract
NK cells lacking CD56 (CD56 neg ) were first identified in chronic HIV-1 infection. However, CD56 neg NK cells also exist in healthy individuals, albeit in significantly lower numbers. Here, we provide an extensive proteomic characterisation of human CD56 neg peripheral blood NK cells of healthy donors and compare them to their CD56 dim and CD56 bright counterparts. Unbiased large-scale surface receptor profiling clustered CD56 neg cells as part of the main NK cell compartment and indicated an overall CD56 dim -like phenotype. Total proteome analyses of CD56 neg NK cells further confirmed their similarity with CD56 dim NK cells, and revealed a complete cytolytic inventory with high levels of perforin and granzyme H and M. In the present study, twelve proteins discriminated CD56 neg NK cells from CD56 dim NK cells with nine up-regulated and three down-regulated proteins in the CD56 neg NK cell population. Those proteins were functionally related to lytic granule composition and transport, interaction with the extracellular matrix, DNA transcription or repair, and proliferation. Corroborating these results, CD56 neg NK cells showed modest cytotoxicity, degranulation, and IFN-ɣ secretion as compared to CD56 dim NK cells. In conclusion, CD56 neg NK cells constitute functionally competent cells sharing many features of bona fide CD56 dim NK cells in healthy individuals, but with some distinct characteristics.
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Voigt, J., Malone, D. F. G., Dias, J., Leeansyah, E., Björkström, N. K., Ljunggren, H. G., … Jänsch, L. (2018). Proteome analysis of human CD56 neg NK cells reveals a homogeneous phenotype surprisingly similar to CD56 dim NK cells. European Journal of Immunology, 48(9), 1456–1469. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201747450
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