NK cells switch from granzyme B to death receptor–mediated cytotoxicity during serial killing

Isabel Prager(TU Dortmund University), Clarissa Liesche(German Cancer Research Center), Hanna van Ooijen(Science for Life Laboratory), Doris Urlaub(TU Dortmund University), Quentin Verron(Science for Life Laboratory), Niklas Sandström(Science for Life Laboratory), Frank Fasbender(TU Dortmund University), Maren Claus(TU Dortmund University), Roland Eils(German Cancer Research Center), Joël Beaudouin(German Cancer Research Center), Björn Önfelt(Science for Life Laboratory), Carsten Watzl(TU Dortmund University)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
July 3, 2019
Cited by 357Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

NK cells eliminate virus-infected and tumor cells by releasing cytotoxic granules containing granzyme B (GrzB) or by engaging death receptors that initiate caspase cascades. The orchestrated interplay between both cell death pathways remains poorly defined. Here we simultaneously measure the activities of GrzB and caspase-8 in tumor cells upon contact with human NK cells. We observed that NK cells switch from inducing a fast GrzB-mediated cell death in their first killing events to a slow death receptor-mediated killing during subsequent tumor cell encounters. Target cell contact reduced intracellular GrzB and perforin and increased surface-CD95L in NK cells over time, showing how the switch in cytotoxicity pathways is controlled. Without perforin, NK cells were unable to perform GrzB-mediated serial killing and only killed once via death receptors. In contrast, the absence of CD95 on tumor targets did not impair GrzB-mediated serial killing. This demonstrates that GrzB and death receptor-mediated cytotoxicity are differentially regulated during NK cell serial killing.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis