Frontiers in Immunology (Jan 2020)

Tuning of NK-Specific HLA-C Expression by Alternative mRNA Splicing

  • Frederick J. Goodson-Gregg,
  • Brian Rothbard,
  • Amy Zhang,
  • Paul W. Wright,
  • Hongchuan Li,
  • Victoria E. Walker-Sperling,
  • Victoria E. Walker-Sperling,
  • Mary Carrington,
  • Mary Carrington,
  • Stephen K. Anderson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.03034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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A complex system regulating HLA-C expression in NK cells, driven by an NK-specific promoter that produces alternatively spliced variants of the 5′-UTR has been recently identified. Exon content of the NK-specific 5′-UTR varies strikingly across HLA-C alleles, with some exons being allele specific. In order to investigate the possibility that allelic variation in the 5′-UTR modulates HLA-C expression levels, cDNAs containing several distinct classes of 5′-UTR were compared. Subtle changes in 5′-UTR content had a significant effect on the expression of HLA-C*03 and HLA-C*12 cDNA clones, suggesting that alternative splicing can fine-tune the level of protein expression. The HLA-C*06 allele was found to be highly expressed in relation to the other alleles studied. However, its increased expression was primarily associated with differences in the peptide-binding groove. Although the impact of allele-specific alternative splicing of NK-Pro transcripts on protein levels can be modest when compared with the effect of changes in peptide-loading, alternative splicing may represent an additional regulatory mechanism to fine-tune HLA-C levels within NK cells in distinct tissue environments or at different stages of maturation in order to achieve optimal levels of missing-self recognition.

Keywords