Circulating human natural killer (NK) lymphocytes have been functionally defined by their ability to exert cytotoxic activity against MHC class I-negative target cell lines, including K562. Therefore, it was proposed that NK cells recognized the ''missing self.'' We show here that the Ig-like CD160 receptor expressed by circulating CD56 dim؉ NK cells or IL-2-deprived NK cell lines is mainly involved in their cytotoxic activity against K562 target cells. Further, we report that HLA-C molecules that are constitutively expressed by K562 trigger NK cell lysis through CD160 receptor engagement. In addition, we demonstrate, with recombinant soluble HLA-Cw3 and CD160 proteins, direct interaction of these molecules. We also find that CD158b inhibitory receptors partially interfere with CD160-mediated cytotoxicity, whereas CD94͞ CD159a and CD85j have no effect on engagement with their respective ligands. Thus, CD160͞HLA-C interaction constitutes a unique pathway to trigger NK cell cytotoxic activity.
CD160 is an Ig-like activating NK cell receptor expressed on the majority of circulating NK cells. This population corresponds to the nonproliferating, highly cytolytic, CD56dimCD16+ subset. CD160 engagement by HLA-C molecules mediates cytotoxic function. In this study, we report that upon specific activation by the physiological ligand HLA-C, or Ab cross-linking, CD160+ peripheral blood NK cells produce IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-6. This unique CD160-mediated cytokine production differs from the one observed after CD16 engagement whose expression is also restricted to the CD56dim cytotoxic NK cell subset. As already reported for the CD160-mediated cytotoxic effector function, CD160-mediated cytokine production by peripheral blood-NK cells is negatively controlled by the killer Ig-like receptor CD158b. Thus, the CD160 receptor represents a unique triggering surface molecule expressed by cytotoxic NK cells that participates in the inflammatory response and determines the type of subsequent specific immunity.
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