The NK cell receptor NKp46 recognizes ecto-calreticulin on ER-stressed cells.
Sumit Sen SantaraDian-Jang LeeÂngela C CrespoJun Jacob HuCaitlin WalkerXiyu MaYing ZhangSourav ChowdhuryKarla F Meza-SosaMercedes LewandrowskiHaiwei ZhangMarjorie RoweArthur A McClellandHao WuCaroline JunqueiraJudy LiebermanPublished in: Nature (2023)
Natural killer (NK) cell kill infected, transformed and stressed cells when an activating NK cell receptor is triggered 1 . Most NK cells and some innate lymphoid cells express the activating receptor NKp46, encoded by NCR1, the most evolutionarily ancient NK cell receptor 2,3 . Blockage of NKp46 inhibits NK killing of many cancer targets 4 . Although a few infectious NKp46 ligands have been identified, the endogenous NKp46 cell surface ligand is unknown. Here we show that NKp46 recognizes externalized calreticulin (ecto-CRT), which translocates from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the cell membrane during ER stress. ER stress and ecto-CRT are hallmarks of chemotherapy-induced immunogenic cell death 5,6 , flavivirus infection and senescence. NKp46 recognition of the P domain of ecto-CRT triggers NK cell signalling and NKp46 caps with ecto-CRT in NK immune synapses. NKp46-mediated killing is inhibited by knockout or knockdown of CALR, the gene encoding CRT, or CRT antibodies, and is enhanced by ectopic expression of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored CRT. NCR1)-deficient human (and Nrc1-deficient mouse) NK cells are impaired in the killing of ZIKV-infected, ER-stressed and senescent cells and ecto-CRT-expressing cancer cells. Importantly, NKp46 recognition of ecto-CRT controls mouse B16 melanoma and RAS-driven lung cancers and enhances tumour-infiltrating NK cell degranulation and cytokine secretion. Thus, NKp46 recognition of ecto-CRT as a danger-associated molecular pattern eliminates ER-stressed cells.
Keyphrases
- nk cells
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- heart failure
- oxidative stress
- dna damage
- zika virus
- endothelial cells
- dna methylation
- estrogen receptor
- gene expression
- breast cancer cells
- cell proliferation
- genome wide
- papillary thyroid
- chemotherapy induced