HLA-C is the inhibitory ligand that determines dominant resistance to lysis by NK1- and NK2-specific natural killer cells.

Marco Colonna(Harvard University), Giovanna Borsellino(Harvard University), Michela Falco(Harvard University), Giovanni Battista Ferrara(Harvard University), Jack L. Strominger(Harvard University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 15, 1993
Cited by 457Open Access
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Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells recognize alloantigens on normal cells. One of these alloantigens correlates with homozygosity for a dimorphism of HLA-C at positions 77-80, which is shared by a number of HLA-C alleles. A second allelic alloantigen correlates with homozygosity for the alternative HLA-C dimorphism, which is shared by the remaining HLA-C alleles. Moreover, NK1- and NK2-specific NK cell lines can be generated by mixed leukocyte cultures in which donor and stimulator are homozygous for the alternative dimorphisms at positions 77-80 of HLA-C. In the present work, the role of HLA-C in NK cell-mediated allorecognition was directly investigated by analyzing the effects produced by transfection of several HLA-C alleles on NK sensitivity of class I-deleted mutant cell lines. Transfection of cells with HLA-C alleles encoding Asn-77-Lys-80 (including HLA-Cw4, -Cw5, and -Cw6) inhibited the lysis of the targets by NK1-specific NK cells, whereas HLA-C alleles encoding Ser-77-Asn-80 (including HLA-Cw1, -Cw7, and -Cw13) protected the targets from NK2-specific NK cells. Thus, HLA-C alleles are the dominant inhibitory ligands that protect targets from lysis by these allospecific NK cells.


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