4.8 Article

Innate immunodeficiency following genetic ablation of Mcl1 in natural killer cells

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5539

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1027472, 1047903, 1046010, 1016701, 487922, 1049407]
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, Dora Lush Training Scholarship [GNT0461276, 1020363]
  3. Australian Research Council
  4. Australia Fellowship [628623]
  5. Cancer Australia
  6. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (SCOR) [7413]
  7. Cancer Council Victoria [1052309]
  8. Menzies Foundation
  9. European Research Council (THINK Advanced Grant)
  10. INSERM
  11. CNRS
  12. Aix Marseille

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The cytokine IL-15 is required for natural killer (NK) cell homeostasis; however, the intrinsic mechanism governing this requirement remains unexplored. Here we identify the absolute requirement for myeloid cell leukaemia sequence-1 (Mcl1) in the sustained survival of NK cells in vivo. Mcl1 is highly expressed in NK cells and regulated by IL-15 in a dose-dependent manner via STAT5 phosphorylation and subsequent binding to the 3'-UTR of Mcl1. Specific deletion of Mcl1 in NK cells results in the absolute loss of NK cells from all tissues owing to a failure to antagonize pro-apoptotic proteins in the outer mitochondrial membrane. This NK lymphopenia results in mice succumbing to multiorgan melanoma metastases, being permissive to allogeneic transplantation and being resistant to toxic shock following polymicrobial sepsis challenge. These results clearly demonstrate a non-redundant pathway linking IL-15 to Mcl1 in the maintenance of NK cells and innate immune responses in vivo.

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