Siglec-9 defines and restrains a natural killer subpopulation highly cytotoxic to HIV-infected cells.
Opeyemi S AdenijiLeticia Kuri-CervantesChenfei YuZiyang XuMichelle HoGlen M ChewCecilia M ShikumaCostin TomescuAshley F GeorgeNadia R RoanLishomwa C NdhlovuJingjing LiuKar MuthumaniDavid B WeinerMichael R BettsHan XiaoMohamed Abdel-MohsenPublished in: PLoS pathogens (2021)
Siglec-9 is an MHC-independent inhibitory receptor expressed on a subset of natural killer (NK) cells. Siglec-9 restrains NK cytotoxicity by binding to sialoglycans (sialic acid-containing glycans) on target cells. Despite the importance of Siglec-9 interactions in tumor immune evasion, their role as an immune evasion mechanism during HIV infection has not been investigated. Using in vivo phenotypic analyses, we found that Siglec-9+ CD56dim NK cells, during HIV infection, exhibit an activated phenotype with higher expression of activating receptors and markers (NKp30, CD38, CD16, DNAM-1, perforin) and lower expression of the inhibitory receptor NKG2A, compared to Siglec-9- CD56dim NK cells. We also found that levels of Siglec-9+ CD56dim NK cells inversely correlate with viral load during viremic infection and CD4+ T cell-associated HIV DNA during suppressed infection. Using in vitro cytotoxicity assays, we confirmed that Siglec-9+ NK cells exhibit higher cytotoxicity towards HIV-infected cells compared to Siglec-9- NK cells. These data are consistent with the notion that Siglec-9+ NK cells are highly cytotoxic against HIV-infected cells. However, blocking Siglec-9 enhanced NK cells' ability to lyse HIV-infected cells, consistent with the known inhibitory function of the Siglec-9 molecule. Together, these data support a model in which the Siglec-9+ CD56dim NK subpopulation is highly cytotoxic against HIV-infected cells even whilst being restrained by the inhibitory effects of Siglec-9. To harness the cytotoxic capacity of the Siglec-9+ NK subpopulation, which is dampened by Siglec-9, we developed a proof-of-concept approach to selectively disrupt Siglec/sialoglycan interactions between NK and HIV-infected cells. We achieved this goal by conjugating Sialidase to several HIV broadly neutralizing antibodies. These conjugates selectively desialylated HIV-infected cells and enhanced NK cells' capacity to kill them. In summary, we identified a novel, glycan-based interaction that may contribute to HIV-infected cells' ability to evade NK immunosurveillance and developed an approach to break this interaction.
Keyphrases
- nk cells
- hiv infected
- antiretroviral therapy
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- human immunodeficiency virus
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- hiv positive
- signaling pathway
- cell proliferation
- pi k akt
- cell death
- high resolution
- zika virus
- south africa
- long non coding rna
- high speed
- circulating tumor cells
- data analysis
- aedes aegypti