Abstract
ABSTRACTNatural killer (NK) cells play a crucial role in the innate immune response to bacterial infections, including those due toPseudomonas aeruginosa(P. aeruginosa) andStaphylococcus aureus(S. aureus).In vivo, it has been shown that NK cells are activated by innate accessory cells that detect the presence of bacteria and activate NK cells via a cytokine network.In vitro, several studies have shown that NK cells can also be activated without the help of accessory cells by direct contact with some bacteria species such as extracellularP. aeruginosa. Whether this phenomenon of direct activation is restricted to certain bacterial species, or whether it can be generalized, is still debated, as for example in the case of NK cell activation byS. aureus, which seems to require the intervention of accessory immune cells. Here, we show with co-incubation experiments between NK cells and two bacterial species, that, in the absence of accessory cells, NK cells are able to impede bacterial growth. This has been demonstrated for theP. aeruginosaPA14 strain, which is hypervirulent and known for its deleterious effects on NK cells, as well as for theS. aureusNewman strain. The monitoring of CD107a by flow cytometry suggests that NK cells degranulate after contact withS. aureusbacteria. Our study contributes to the idea that NK cells can be activated in the absence of any accessory cells by various species of bacteria, even an hypervirulent one, and therefore that NKs can directly have an antibacterial effect. This important insight may pave the way for new therapeutic approaches using antibacterial NK-cell engagers.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference32 articles.
1. Natural cytotoxic effector cell activity against Shigella flexneri-infected HeLa cells;Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md: 1950),1986
2. Cytolytic activity of human peripheral blood leukocytes against Legionella pneumophila-infected monocytes: characterization of the effector cell and augmentation by interleukin 2;Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md: 1950),1987
3. Natural killer cell-mediated lysis ofMycobacterium-avium complex-infected monocytes
4. Cytotoxic Cells Kill Intracellular Bacteria through Granulysin-Mediated Delivery of Granzymes
5. Whatever turns you on: accessory-cell-dependent activation of NK cells by pathogens