Nature Communications (Jul 2024)

Single-cell profiling identifies a CD8bright CD244bright Natural Killer cell subset that reflects disease activity in HLA-A29-positive birdshot chorioretinopathy

  • Pulak R. Nath,
  • Mary Maclean,
  • Vijay Nagarajan,
  • Jung Wha Lee,
  • Mehmet Yakin,
  • Aman Kumar,
  • Hadi Nadali,
  • Brian Schmidt,
  • Koray D. Kaya,
  • Shilpa Kodati,
  • Alice Young,
  • Rachel R. Caspi,
  • Jonas J. W. Kuiper,
  • H. Nida Sen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50472-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Birdshot chorioretinopathy is an inflammatory eye condition strongly associated with MHC-I allele HLA-A29. The striking association with MHC-I suggests involvement of T cells, whereas natural killer (NK) cell involvement remains largely unstudied. Here we show that HLA-A29-positive birdshot chorioretinopathy patients have a skewed NK cell pool containing expanded CD16 positive NK cells which produce more proinflammatory cytokines. These NK cells contain populations that express CD8A which is involved in MHC-I recognition on target cells, display gene signatures indicative of high cytotoxic activity (GZMB, PRF1 and ISG15), and signaling through NK cell receptor CD244 (SH2D1B). Long-term monitoring of a cohort of birdshot chorioretinopathy patients with active disease identifies a population of CD8bright CD244bright NK cells, which rapidly declines to normal levels upon clinical remission following successful treatment. Collectively, these studies implicate CD8bright CD244bright NK cells in birdshot chorioretinopathy.