Protection from Natural Killer Cell-Mediated Lysis by HLA-G Expression on Target Cells

Laszlo Pazmany(Harvard University), Ofer Mandelboim(Harvard University), Mar Valés‐Gómez(Harvard University), Daniel M. Davis(Harvard University), Hugh T. Reyburn(Harvard University), Jack L. Strominger(Harvard University)
Science
November 1, 1996
Cited by 502

Abstract

The outermost layer of the human placenta is devoid of classical class I human leukocyte antigens (HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-C) and class II proteins (HLA-DR, HLA-DQ, and HLA-DP). Although this prevents recognition by maternal T lymphocytes, the lack of class I molecules leaves these cells susceptible to attack by natural killer (NK) cells. However, trophoblast cells directly in contact with the maternal tissues express the class I molecule HLA-G, which may be involved in protecting the trophoblast from recognition by NK cells. Here evidence is provided that expression of HLA-G is sufficient to protect otherwise susceptible target cells from lysis by activated NK1 and NK2 cell lines and clones that are specific for distinct groups of HLA-C alleles. The receptors on NK cells that recognize HLA-G are also identified.


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