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A novel immature natural killer cell subpopulation predicts relapse after cord blood transplantation

Authors :
Wei Li Zhao
Rohtesh S. Mehta
Jing Wang
Ken Chen
Katayoun Rezvani
Han Chen
Pinaki P. Banerjee
Ye Li
Luis Muniz-Feliciano
Yuanxin Xi
Mecit Kaplan
Elizabeth J. Shpall
Mayra Hernandez Sanabria
Elif Gokdemir
Juan Jimenez
Qi Miao
Gonca Ozcan
Hila Shaim
Mayela Mendt
Nobuhiko Imahashi
Lucila Nassif Kerbauy
Jiangxing Lv
Rafet Basar
May Daher
David Marin
Li Li
Bingqian Hu
Richard E. Champlin
Source :
Blood advances. 3(23)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells are highly heterogeneous, with vast phenotypic and functional diversity at the single-cell level. They are involved in the innate immune response against malignant and virus-infected cells. To understand the effect of NK diversity during immune recovery on the antitumor response after cord blood transplantation (CBT), we used high-dimensional mass cytometry and the metrics of NK cell diversity to study the NK cell repertoire in serial samples from 43 CBT recipients. A higher-diversity index based on single-cell combinatorial phenotypes was significantly associated with a lower risk for relapse after CBT (P = .005). Cytomegalovirus reactivation was a major factor in the development of a more diverse NK repertoire after CBT. Notably, we identified a group of patients whose CB-derived NK cells after transplantation possessed an immature phenotype (CB-NK(im)), characterized by poor effector function and a low diversity index. Frequencies of CB-NK(im) of 11.8% or higher during the early post-CBT recovery phase were highly predictive for relapse (area under the curve [AUC], 0.979), a finding that was validated in a second independent cohort of patients (n = 25; AUC, 0.977). Moreover, we showed that the maturation, diversity, and acquisition of effector function by CB-NK(im) early after CBT were driven by interleukin 15. Our data indicate that the diversity of the NK cell repertoire after CBT contributes importantly to the risk for subsequent relapse. We suggest that the use of diversity metrics and high-dimensional mass cytometry may be useful tools in predicting clinical outcomes and informing the design of therapeutic strategies to prevent relapse after CBT.

Details

ISSN :
24739537
Volume :
3
Issue :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....757e85b3bc6b8a5d88f43469f9f2d213