Cell Reports (May 2016)

Critical Role of CD2 Co-stimulation in Adaptive Natural Killer Cell Responses Revealed in NKG2C-Deficient Humans

  • Lisa L. Liu,
  • Johannes Landskron,
  • Eivind H. Ask,
  • Monika Enqvist,
  • Ebba Sohlberg,
  • James A. Traherne,
  • Quirin Hammer,
  • Jodie P. Goodridge,
  • Stella Larsson,
  • Jyothi Jayaraman,
  • Vincent Y.S. Oei,
  • Marie Schaffer,
  • Kjetil Taskén,
  • Hans-Gustaf Ljunggren,
  • Chiara Romagnani,
  • John Trowsdale,
  • Karl-Johan Malmberg,
  • Vivien Béziat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.04.005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
pp. 1088 – 1099

Abstract

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Infection by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) leads to NKG2C-driven expansion of adaptive natural killer (NK) cells, contributing to host defense. However, approximately 4% of all humans carry a homozygous deletion of the gene that encodes NKG2C (NKG2C−/−). Assessment of NK cell repertoires in 60 NKG2C−/− donors revealed a broad range of NK cell populations displaying characteristic footprints of adaptive NK cells, including a terminally differentiated phenotype, functional reprogramming, and epigenetic remodeling of the interferon (IFN)-γ promoter. We found that both NKG2C− and NKG2C+ adaptive NK cells expressed high levels of CD2, which synergistically enhanced ERK and S6RP phosphorylation following CD16 ligation. Notably, CD2 co-stimulation was critical for the ability of adaptive NK cells to respond to antibody-coated target cells. These results reveal an unexpected redundancy in the human NK cell response to HCMV and suggest that CD2 provides “signal 2” in antibody-driven adaptive NK cell responses.