Author:
Gars Mathieu Le,Seiler Christof,Kay Alexander W.,Bayless Nicholas L.,Sola Elsa,Starosvetsky Elina,Moore Lindsay,Shen-Orr Shai S.,Aziz Natali,Khatri Purvesh,Dekker Cornelia L.,Swan Gary E.,Davis Mark M.,Holmes Susan,Blish Catherine A.
Abstract
AbstractNatural killer (NK) cells use a diverse array of activating and inhibitory surface receptors to detect threats and provide an early line of defense against viral infections and cancer. Here, we demonstrate that the cell surface protein CD38 is a key human NK cell functional receptor through a role in immune synapse formation. CD38 expression marks a mature subset of human NK cells with a high functional capacity. NK cells expressing high levels of CD38 display enhanced killing and IFN-γ secretion in response to influenza virus-infected and tumor cells. Inhibition of CD38 enzymatic activity does not influence NK cell function, but blockade of CD38 and its ligand CD31 abrogates killing and IFN-γ expression in response to influenza-infected cells. Blockade of CD38 on NK cells similarly inhibits killing of tumor cells. CD38 localizes and accumulates at the immune synapse between NK cells and their targets, and blocking CD38 severely abrogates the ability of NK cells to form conjugates and immune synapses with target cells. Thus, CD38 plays a critical role in NK cell immune synapse formation. These findings open new avenues in immunotherapeutic development for cancer and infection by revealing a critical role for CD38 in NK cell function.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
14 articles.
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