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Cutting edge: identification and characterization of human intrahepatic CD49a+ NK cells.

Nicole MarquardtVivien BéziatSanna NyströmJulia HengstMartin A IvarssonEliisa KekäläinenHelene JohanssonJenny MjösbergMagnus WestgrenTim O LankischHeiner WedemeyerEwa C EllisHans-Gustaf LjunggrenJakob MichaëlssonNiklas K Björkström
Published in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2015)
Although NK cells are considered innate, recent studies in mice revealed the existence of a unique lineage of hepatic CD49a(+)DX5(-) NK cells with adaptive-like features. Development of this NK cell lineage is, in contrast to conventional NK cells, dependent on T-bet but not Eomes. In this study, we describe the identification of a T-bet(+)Eomes(-)CD49a(+) NK cell subset readily detectable in the human liver, but not in afferent or efferent hepatic venous or peripheral blood. Human intrahepatic CD49a(+) NK cells express killer cell Ig-like receptor and NKG2C, indicative of having undergone clonal-like expansion, are CD56(bright), and express low levels of CD16, CD57, and perforin. After stimulation, CD49a(+) NK cells express high levels of inflammatory cytokines but degranulate poorly. CD49a(+) NK cells retain their phenotype after expansion in long-term in vitro cultures. These results demonstrate the presence of a likely human counterpart of mouse intrahepatic NK cells with adaptive-like features.
Keyphrases
  • nk cells
  • endothelial cells
  • single cell
  • peripheral blood
  • immune response
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • adipose tissue
  • cell therapy
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • insulin resistance
  • bone marrow
  • contrast enhanced