Expansion of Human NK Cells Using K562 Cells Expressing OX40 Ligand and Short Exposure to IL-21

SoonHo Kweon(Pohang University of Science and Technology), Minh‐Trang Thi Phan(Pohang University of Science and Technology), Sejong Chun(Chonnam National University), HongBi Yu(Sungkyunkwan University), Jin-Ho Kim(Sungkyunkwan University), Seok‐Ho Kim(Kongju National University), Jaemin Lee(Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology), Alaa Kassim Ali(University of Ottawa), Seung Hwan Lee(University of Ottawa), Sang‐Ki Kim(Kongju National University), Junsang Doh(Seoul National University), Duck Cho(Sungkyunkwan University)
Frontiers in Immunology
April 24, 2019
Cited by 102Open Access
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Abstract

Background: Natural Killer (NK) cell-based immunotherapy used to treat cancer requires the adoptive transfer of a large number of activated NK cells. Here, we report a new effective method to expand human NK cells ex vivo using K562 cells genetically engineered (GE) to express OX40 ligand (K562-OX40L) in combination with a short exposure to soluble IL-21. In addition, we describe a possible mechanism of the NK cell expansion through the OX40 receptor-OX40 ligand axis which is dependent on NK cell homotypic interaction. Methods: K562-OX40L cells were generated by lentiviral transduction and were used as feeder cells to expand and activate NK cells from PBMCs in the presence of IL-2/IL-15. Soluble IL-21 was also added in various concentrations only once at the beginning of the culture. NK cells were expanded for 4 to 5 weeks, and the purity, expansion rate, phenotype and function (cytotoxicity, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC), cytokine production, CD107a degranulation) of these expanded NK cells were compared to those generated by using K562 feeder cells. Results: The culture of NK cells with K562-OX40L cells in combination with the transient exposure to IL-21 highly enhanced NK cell expansion to approximately 2000-fold after 4 weeks of culture, compared to a 303-fold expansion using the conventional K562 cells. Mechanistically, the OX40-OX40L axis between the feeder cells and NK cells as well as the homotypic interaction between NK cells through the OX40-OX40L axis were both necessary for NK cell expansion. The short exposure of NK cells to IL-21 had a synergistic effect with OX40 signaling for NK cell expansion. Apart from their enhanced expansion, NK cells grown with K562-OX40L feeder cells were similar to those grown with conventional K562 cells in regard to the surface expression of various receptors, cytotoxicity, ADCC, cytokine secretion, and CD107 degranulation. Conclusion: Our data suggest that OX40 ligand is a potent co-stimulant for the robust expansion of human NK cells and the homotypic NK cell interactions through the OX40-OX40L axis is a mechanism of NK cell expansion.


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