HLA-E is a major ligand for the natural killer inhibitory receptor CD94/NKG2A

Ni Lee(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Manuel Llano(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Marta Carretero(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Akiko Ishitani(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Francisco Navarro(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Miguel López‐Botet(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Daniel E. Geraghty(Fred Hutch Cancer Center)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 28, 1998
Cited by 1,039Open Access

Abstract

We previously showed that the availability of a nonamer peptide derived from certain HLA class I signal sequences is a necessary requirement for the stabilization of endogenous HLA-E expression on the surface of 721.221 cells. This led us to examine the ability of HLA-E to protect HLA class I transfectants from natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis. It was possible to implicate the CD94/NKG2A complex as an inhibitory receptor recognizing this class Ib molecule by using as target a .221 transfectant selectively expressing surface HLA-E. HLA-E had no apparent inhibitory effect mediated through the identified Ig superfamily (Ig-SF) human killer cell inhibitory receptors or ILT2/LIR1. Further studies of CD94/NKG2+ NK cell-mediated recognition of .221 cells transfected with different HLA class I allotypes (i.e., -Cw4, -Cw3, -B7) confirmed that the inhibitory interaction was mediated by CD94/NKG2A recognizing the surface HLA-E molecule, because only antibodies directed against either HLA-E, CD94, or CD94/NKG2A specifically restored lysis. Surface stabilization of HLA-E in cold-treated .221 cells loaded with appropriate peptides was sufficient to confer protection, resulting from recognition of the HLA class Ib molecule by the CD94/NKG2A inhibitory receptor. Consistent with the prediction that the ligand for CD94/NKG2A is expressed ubiquitously, our examination of HLA-E antigen distribution indicated that it is detectable on the surface of a wide variety of cell types.


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