Induced CD8α identifies human NK cells with enhanced proliferative fitness and modulates NK cell activation

Celia C. Cubitt(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Pamela Wong(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Hannah K. Dorando(Washington University in St. Louis), Jennifer A. Foltz(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Jennifer Tran(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Lynne Marsala(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Nancy D. Marín(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Mark Foster(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Timothy Schappe(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Hijab Fatima(Columbia University), Michelle Becker‐Hapak(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Alice Y. Zhou(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Kimberly Hwang(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Miriam T. Jacobs(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), David A. Russler‐Germain(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Emily M. Mace(Columbia University), Melissa M. Berrien-Elliott(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center), Jacqueline E. Payton(Washington University in St. Louis), Todd A. Fehniger(University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
May 28, 2024
Cited by 12Open Access
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Abstract

The surface receptor CD8α is present on 20%-80% of human (but not mouse) NK cells, yet its function on NK cells remains poorly understood. CD8α expression on donor NK cells was associated with a lack of therapeutic responses in patients with leukemia in prior studies, thus, we hypothesized that CD8α may affect critical NK cell functions. Here, we discovered that CD8α- NK cells had improved control of leukemia in xenograft models compared with CD8α+ NK cells, likely due to an enhanced capacity for proliferation. Unexpectedly, we found that CD8α expression was induced on approximately 30% of previously CD8α- NK cells following IL-15 stimulation. These induced CD8α+ (iCD8α+) NK cells had the greatest proliferation, responses to IL-15 signaling, and metabolic activity compared with those that sustained existing CD8α expression (sustained CD8α+) or those that remained CD8α- (persistent CD8α-). These iCD8α+ cells originated from an IL-15Rβhi NK cell population, with CD8α expression dependent on the transcription factor RUNX3. Moreover, CD8A CRISPR/Cas9 deletion resulted in enhanced responses through the activating receptor NKp30, possibly by modulating KIR inhibitory function. Thus, CD8α status identified human NK cell capacity for IL-15-induced proliferation and metabolism in a time-dependent fashion, and its presence had a suppressive effect on NK cell-activating receptors.


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