Frontiers in Immunology (Jan 2022)

CD33 Delineates Two Functionally Distinct NK Cell Populations Divergent in Cytokine Production and Antibody-Mediated Cellular Cytotoxicity

  • Maryam Hejazi,
  • Congcong Zhang,
  • Sabrina B. Bennstein,
  • Vera Balz,
  • Sarah B. Reusing,
  • Sarah B. Reusing,
  • Melissa Quadflieg,
  • Keven Hoerster,
  • Stefan Heinrichs,
  • Helmut Hanenberg,
  • Sebastian Oberbeck,
  • Marcus Nitsche,
  • Sophie Cramer,
  • Rita Pfeifer,
  • Pranav Oberoi,
  • Heiko Rühl,
  • Johannes Oldenburg,
  • Peter Brossart,
  • Peter A. Horn,
  • Florian Babor,
  • Winfried S. Wels,
  • Johannes C. Fischer,
  • Nina Möker,
  • Markus Uhrberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.798087
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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The generation and expansion of functionally competent NK cells in vitro is of great interest for their application in immunotherapy of cancer. Since CD33 constitutes a promising target for immunotherapy of myeloid malignancies, NK cells expressing a CD33-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) were generated. Unexpectedly, we noted that CD33-CAR NK cells could not be efficiently expanded in vitro due to a fratricide-like process in which CD33-CAR NK cells killed other CD33-CAR NK cells that had upregulated CD33 in culture. This upregulation was dependent on the stimulation protocol and encompassed up to 50% of NK cells including CD56dim NK cells that do generally not express CD33 in vivo. RNAseq analysis revealed that upregulation of CD33+ NK cells was accompanied by a unique transcriptional signature combining features of canonical CD56bright (CD117high, CD16low) and CD56dim NK cells (high expression of granzyme B and perforin). CD33+ NK cells exhibited significantly higher mobilization of cytotoxic granula and comparable levels of cytotoxicity against different leukemic target cells compared to the CD33− subset. Moreover, CD33+ NK cells showed superior production of IFNγ and TNFα, whereas CD33− NK cells exerted increased antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). In summary, the study delineates a novel functional divergence between NK cell subsets upon in vitro stimulation that is marked by CD33 expression. By choosing suitable stimulation protocols, it is possible to preferentially generate CD33+ NK cells combining efficient target cell killing and cytokine production, or alternatively CD33− NK cells, which produce less cytokines but are more efficient in antibody-dependent applications.

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