4.5 Article

Requirements for control of B-cell lymphoma by NK cells

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 2, Pages 494-504

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eji.200939937

Keywords

c-myc; Missing self; NK-cell activation; NKG2D; Tumor escape

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Krebshilfe [107114, 107128]
  2. Wilhelm-Sander-Stiftung [2003.043.2]
  3. SFB [685]

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The role of NK cells in the control of endogenously arising tumors is still unclear. We monitored activation and effector functions of NK cells in a c-myc-transgenic mouse model of spontaneously arising lymphoma. At early stages, tumors demonstrated reduced MHC class I expression and increased expression of natural killer group 2D ligands (NKG2D-L). NK cells in these tumors showed an activated phenotype that correlated with the loss of tumor MHC class I. With increasing tumor load however, NK-cell effector functions became progressively paralyzed or exhausted. In later stages of disease, tumors re-expressed MHC class I and lost NKG2D-L, suggesting a role of these two signals for NK cell-mediated tumor control. Testing a panel of lymphoma cell lines expressing various MHC class I and NKG2D-L levels suggested that NK cell-dependent tumor control required a priming and a triggering signal that were provided by MHC class I down-regulation and by NKG2D-L, respectively. Deleting either of the two signals resulted in tumor escape. At early disease stages, immune stimulation through TLR-ligands in vivo efficiently delayed lymphoma growth in a strictly NK cell-dependent manner. Thus, NK-receptor coengagement is crucial for NK-cell functions in vivo and especially for NK cell-mediated tumor surveillance.

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