Analyses of phenotypic and functional characteristics of CX3CR1-expressing natural killer cells |
| |
Authors: | Hamann Isabell Unterwalder Nadine Cardona Astrid E Meisel Christian Zipp Frauke Ransohoff Richard M Infante-Duarte Carmen |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Experimental and Clinical Research Centre, Charité?–?Universit?tsmedizin Berlin and Max Delbrück Centre for Molecular Medicine, Berlin, Germany;2. Institut für Medizinische Immunologie, Charité?–?Universit?tsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany;3. Department of Biology, the University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA;4. Department of Neurology, University Medical Centre, Johannes Gutenberg, University, Mainz, Germany;5. Neuroinflammation Research Center, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA |
| |
Abstract: | We previously demonstrated a correlation between the frequency of CX3CR1-expressing human natural killer (NK) cells and disease activity in multiple sclerosis and showed that CX3CR1(high) NK cells were more cytotoxic than their CX3CR1(neg/low) counterparts. Here we aimed to determine whether human NK cell fractions defined by CX3CR1 represent distinct subtypes. Phenotypic and functional NK cell analyses revealed that, distinct from CX3CR1(high), CX3CR1(neg/low) NK cells expressed high amounts of type 2 cytokines, proliferated robustly in response to interleukin-2 and promoted a strong up-regulation of the key co-stimulatory molecule CD40 on monocytes. Co-expression analyses of CX3CR1 and CD56 demonstrated the existence of different NK cell fractions based on the surface expression of these two surface markers, the CX3CR1(neg) CD56(bright), CX3CR1(neg) CD56(dim) and CX3CR1(high) CD56(dim) fractions. Additional investigations on the expression of NK cell receptors (KIR, NKG2A, NKp30 and NKp46) and the maturation markers CD27, CD62L and CD57 indicated that CX3CR1 expression of CD56(dim) discriminated between an intermediary CX3CR1(neg) CD56(dim) and fully mature CX3CR1(high) CD56(dim) NK cell fractions. Hence, CX3CR1 emerges as an additional differentiation marker that may link NK cell maturation with the ability to migrate to different organs including the central nervous system. |
| |
Keywords: | chemokines CX3CR1 natural killer cell maturation natural killer cell phenotypes natural killer cells |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|