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Human antigen-specific memory natural killer cell responses develop against HIV-1 and influenza virus and are dependent on MHC-E restriction

Authors :
Marcus Altfeld
R. Keith Reeves
Kyle Kroll
George Tweet
Taylor Yoder
Sho K. Sugawara
Paul A. Goepfert
Haley L. Dugan
Scott Smith
Adam Grundhoff
Olivier Lucar
Stephanie Jost
Joshua Ghofrani
Alexandra Werner
Phillip J. Tomezsko
Michaela Müller-Trutwin
Rhianna Jones
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

For over a decade, multiple studies have disputed the notion of natural killer (NK) cells as purely innate lymphocytes by demonstrating that they are capable of putative antigen-specific immunological memory against multiple infectious agents including two critical global health priorities – HIV and influenza. However, the mechanisms underlying antigen specificity remain unknown. Herein, we demonstrate that antigen-specific human NK cell memory develops upon exposure to both HIV and influenza, unified by a conserved and epitope-specific targetable mechanism firmly dependent on the activating CD94/NKG2C receptor and its ligand HLA-E, and confirm these findings by three rigorous and novel assays. We validated the permanent acquisition of antigen-specificity by individual memory NK cells by single-cell cloning. We identified biomarkers of antigen-specific NK cell memory through RNA-Seq transcriptomic fingerprints and complex immunophenotyping by 30-parameter flow cytometry showing elevated expression of KLRG1, α4β7 and NKG2C. Finally, we show individual HLA-E-restricted peptides that may constitute the dominant response in HIV-1- and influenza-infected persons in vivo. Our findings clarify the mechanisms behind formation of antigen-specific memory NK cells, and suggest they could be targeted for future vaccines, cure strategies, or other therapeutic interventions.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........50b311c059cd5b89758b793c7655ad3f