Natural killer cell activation enhances immune pathology and promotes chronic infection by limiting CD8+ T-cell immunity

Date

2012

Authors

Lang, Philipp A
Lang, Karl S.
Xu, Haifeng C/
Grusdat, Melanie
Parish, Ian
Recher, Mike
Elford, Alisha R.
Dhanji, Salim
Shaabani, Namir
Tran, Charles W.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences (USA)

Abstract

Infections with HIV, hepatitis B virus, and hepatitis C virus can turn into chronic infections, which currently affect more than 500 million patients worldwide. It is generally thought that virus-mediated T-cell exhaustion limits T-cell function, thus promoting chronic disease.Here we demonstrate that natural killer (NK) cells have a negative impact on the development of T-cell immunity by using the murine lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus.NK cell-deficient (Nfil3 -/-, E4BP4 -/-)mice exhibited a higher virus-specific T-cell response. In addition, NK cell depletion caused enhanced T-cell immunity in WT mice, which led to rapid virus control and prevented chronic infection in lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus clone 13- and reduced viral load in DOCILEinfected animals. Further experiments showed that NKG2D triggered regulatory NK cell functions, which were mediated by perforin, and limited T-cell responses. Therefore,we identified an important role of regulatory NK cells in limiting T-cell immunity during virus infection.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: perforin; animal cell; animal experiment; article; CD8+ T lymphocyte; cell activation; cell function; cellular immunity; controlled study; immunopathology; in vivo study; infection prevention; mouse; natural killer cell; nonhuman; priority journal; virus Effector T cells; NK cell activation; Regulatory innate immunity; Virus elimination; Virus persistence

Citation

Source

PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

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