4.5 Article

Interleukin-12 treatment down-regulates STAT4 and induces apoptosis with increasing ROS production in human natural killer cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF LEUKOCYTE BIOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 1, Pages 87-97

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1189/jlb.1210674

Keywords

negative-feedback mechanism; transcription factors

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NK cells are prominent mediators of the immunomodulating and antiangiogenic activity of IL-12. However, the effect of prolonged IL-12 treatment on NK cells is unclear. In this study, we observed that IL-12 initially activates NK cells, but prolonged IL-12 treatment specifically down-regulates IL-12 signaling and induces NK cell apoptosis associated with a significant reduction in cytolytic activity and IFN-gamma production in response to further IL-12 stimulation. Further results demonstrate that prolonged IL-12 stimulation of NK cells specifically decreases the level of activated STAT4 protein, a critical IL-12 signaling component, through decreasing STAT4 mRNA and protein levels rather than inducing STAT4 protein degradation. IL-12 treatment induces NK cell activation as well as levels of ROS, but prolonged IL-12 treatment causes ROS accumulation, which in turn, results in the loss of Delta psi(m), the release of cytochrome c, and the activation of caspase-3, resulting in NK cell apoptosis. These findings provide new insights into IL-12 regulation in human NK cells, where IL-12 initially promotes NK cell activation but subsequently limits this response through a negative-feedback mechanism. J. Leukoc. Biol. 90: 87-97; 2011.

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