Cell Reports (Jul 2014)

The Transcription Factor AHR Prevents the Differentiation of a Stage 3 Innate Lymphoid Cell Subset to Natural Killer Cells

  • Tiffany Hughes,
  • Edward L. Briercheck,
  • Aharon G. Freud,
  • Rossana Trotta,
  • Susan McClory,
  • Steven D. Scoville,
  • Karen Keller,
  • Youcai Deng,
  • Jordan Cole,
  • Nicholas Harrison,
  • Charlene Mao,
  • Jianying Zhang,
  • Don M. Benson,
  • Jianhua Yu,
  • Michael A. Caligiuri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.05.042
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 150 – 162

Abstract

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Accumulating evidence indicates that human natural killer (NK) cells develop in secondary lymphoid tissue (SLT) through a so-called “stage 3” developmental intermediate minimally characterized by a CD34−CD117+CD94− immunophenotype that lacks mature NK cell function. This stage 3 population is heterogeneous, potentially composed of functionally distinct innate lymphoid cell (ILC) types that include interleukin-1 receptor (IL-1R1)-positive, IL-22-producing ILC3s. Whether human ILC3s are developmentally related to NK cells is a subject of ongoing investigation. Here, we show that antagonism of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) or silencing of AHR gene expression promotes the differentiation of tonsillar IL-22-producing IL-1R1hi human ILC3s to CD56brightCD94+ interferon (IFN)-γ-producing cytolytic mature NK cells expressing eomesodermin (EOMES) and T-Box Protein 21 (TBX21 or TBET). Hence, we demonstrate the lineage plasticity of human ILCs by identifying AHR as a transcription factor that prevents IL-1R1hi ILC3s from differentiating into NK cells.