Cell Reports (Dec 2020)

Divergent Role for STAT5 in the Adaptive Responses of Natural Killer Cells

  • Gabriela M. Wiedemann,
  • Simon Grassmann,
  • Colleen M. Lau,
  • Moritz Rapp,
  • Alejandro V. Villarino,
  • Christin Friedrich,
  • Georg Gasteiger,
  • John J. O’Shea,
  • Joseph C. Sun

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 11
p. 108498

Abstract

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Summary: Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphocytes with the capacity to elicit adaptive features, including clonal expansion and immunological memory. Because signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 (STAT5) is essential for NK cell development, the roles of this transcription factor and its upstream cytokines interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-15 during infection have not been carefully investigated. In this study, we investigate how STAT5 regulates transcription during viral infection. We demonstrate that STAT5 is induced in NK cells by IL-12 and STAT4 early after infection and that partial STAT5 deficiency results in a defective capacity of NK cells to generate long-lived memory cells. Furthermore, we find a functional dichotomy of IL-2 and IL-15 signaling outputs during viral infection, whereby both cytokines drive clonal expansion, but only IL-15 is required for memory NK cell survival. We thus highlight a role for STAT5 signaling in promoting an optimal anti-viral NK cell response.

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