During mouse cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection, a population of Ly49H ؉ natural killer (NK) cells expands and is responsible for disease clearance through the induction of a "memory NK-cell response." Whether similar events occur in human CMV infection is unknown. In the present study, we characterized the kinetics of the NK-cell response to CMV reactivation in human recipients after hematopoietic cell transplantation. During acute infection, NKG2C ؉ NK cells expanded and were potent producers of IFN␥. NKG2C ؉ NK cells predominately expressed killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor, and self-killer cell immunoglobulinlike receptors were required for robust IFN␥ production. During the first year after transplantation, CMV reactivation induced a more mature phenotype characterized by an increase in CD56 dim NK cells. Strikingly, increased frequencies of NKG2C ؉ NK cells persisted and continued to increase in recipients who reactivated CMV, whereas these cells remained at low frequency in recipients without CMV reactivation. Persisting NKG2C ؉ NK cells lacked NKG2A, expressed CD158b, preferentially acquired CD57, and were potent producers of IFN␥ during the first year after transplantation. Recipients who reactivated CMV also expressed higher amounts of IFN␥, T-bet, and IL-15R␣ mRNA transcripts. Our findings support the emerging concept that CMV-induced innate memory-cell populations may contribute to malignant disease relapse protection and infectious disease control long after transplantation. (Blood. 2012; 119(11):2665-2674) IntroductionNatural killer (NK) cells are important effectors during the host innate immune response to viral infections. They can recognize and eliminate virally infected cells, interact with dendritic cells, and produce a range of cytokines and chemokines (eg, IFN␥, TNF-␣, MIP-1␣, MIP-1, and RANTES) that recruit and modulate the adaptive immune response.Under normal homeostatic conditions, a balance of activating and inhibitory signals tightly controls NK-cell function. 1,2 The best-characterized inhibitory receptors are the inhibitory killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) that recognize allelic epitopes present on certain class I human leukocyte antigens (HLAs) and the C-type lectin-like receptor NKG2A, which recognizes the nonclassic class I HLA, HLA-E. 3,4 Activating signals are mediated by receptor families, including activating KIR, NKG2C, NKG2D, the natural cytotoxicity receptors (NKp30, NKp44, and NKp46), CD16, and CD244. 1 When self HLA is down-regulated, cells are susceptible to NK-cell lysis because of the lack of ligands for the inhibitory receptors, a phenomenon known as the "missing self" hypothesis. 5,6 Human cytomegalovirus (CMV), a member of the Herpesviridae family, causes asymptomatic or mild illness in healthy people. 7 CMV remains latent in infected hosts and, by adulthood, approximately 60% of people in the United States are seropositive for CMV. 8 However, for patients immunosuppressed due to HIV infection or solid organ or hematopoietic call transplantatio...
• Activated NK cells loose CD16 (FcRgIII) and CD62L through a metalloprotease called ADAM17. • Inhibition of ADAM17enhances CD16 mediated NK cell function by preserving CD16 on the NK cell surface to enhance ADCC.The Fc receptor CD16 is present on essentially all CD56 dim peripheral blood natural killer (NK) cells. Upon recognition of antibody-coated cells it delivers a potent signal to NK cells, which eliminate targets through direct killing and cytokine production. Here we investigated the regulation of CD16 surface expression after NK cell activation. Cytokine activation and target cell stimulation led to marked decreases in CD16 expression. Activation of CD56 dim NK cells by cross-linking CD16 with antibodies resulted in a loss of CD16 and CD62L, which correlated with increased interferon-g production. A disintegrin and metalloprotease-17 (ADAM17) is shown to be expressed by NK cells, and its selective inhibition abrogated CD16 and CD62L shedding, and led to enhanced interferon-g production, especially when triggering was delivered through CD16. Fc-induced production of cytokines by NK cells exposed to rituximab-coated B cell targets was also enhanced by ADAM17 inhibition. This supports an important role for targeting ADAM17 to prevent CD16 shedding and improve the efficacy of therapeutic antibodies. Our findings demonstrate that over-activation of ADAM17 in NK cells may be detrimental to their effector functions by down-regulating surface expression of CD16 and CD62L. (Blood. 2013;121(18):3599-3608)
Key Points• Depletion of host regulatory T cells with IL2DT improves efficacy of haploidentical NK cell therapy for refractory acute myeloid leukemia.• Depletion of Treg and persistence of NK cells for $7 days after NK cell adoptive transfer predicts beneficial clinical responses.Haploidentical natural killer (NK) cell infusions can induce remissions in some patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) but regulatory T-cell (Treg) suppression may reduce efficacy. We treated 57 refractory AML patients with lymphodepleting cyclophosphamide and fludarabine followed by NK cell infusion and interleukin (IL)-2 administration. In 42 patients, donor NK cell expansion was detected in 10%, whereas in 15 patients receiving host Treg depletion with the IL-2-diphtheria fusion protein (IL2DT), the rate was 27%, with a median absolute count of 1000 NK cells/mL blood. IL2DT was associated with improved complete remission rates at day 28 (53% vs 21%; P 5 .02) and disease-free survival at 6 months (33% vs 5%; P < .01). In the IL2DT cohort, NK cell expansion correlated with higher postchemotherapy serum IL-15 levels (P 5 .002), effective peripheral blood Treg depletion (<5%) at day 7 (P < .01), and decreased IL-35 levels at day 14 (P 5 .02). In vitro assays demonstrated that Tregs cocultured with NK cells inhibit their proliferation by competition for IL-2 but not for IL-15. Together with our clinical observations, this supports the need to optimize the in vivo cytokine milieu where adoptively transferred NK cells compete with other lymphocytes to improve clinical efficacy in patients with refractory AML. This study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov, identifiers: NCT00274846 and NCT01106950. (Blood. 2014;123(25):3855-3863)
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