Costantini C et al. (JAN 2009)
Immunobiology 214 9-10 828--34
On the co-purification of 6-sulfo LacNAc(+) dendritic cells (slanDC) with NK cells enriched from human blood.
The ability of NK cells to directly recognize pathogens and be activated via Toll-like receptors (TLR) is increasingly recognized. Nevertheless,controversial results on the NK cell ability to be directly activated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS),the ligand of TLR4,have been recently reported. To start elucidating the reasons explaining the contrasting observations of the literature,we focused on the potential role of currently used NK cell purification procedures to condition putative NK cell responsiveness to LPS. To do so,human NK cells were isolated by negative selection,using three different commercial kits,to be comparatively evaluated for the production of IFNgamma in response to ultra-pure LPS and/or IL-2. Despite the lack of surface TLR4,we found that two out of the three NK cell-enriched populations released IFNgamma (and one of the two,IL-12p70 as well) in response to the LPS plus IL-2 combination,whereas the last one did not. However,the two LPS plus IL-2-responsive NK cell populations were found variably contaminated with 6-sulfo LacNAc(+) dendritic cells (slanDC),demonstrated responsible for triggering,via the production of IL-12p70 in response to LPS,the release of IFNgamma by IL-2-stimulated NK cells. Accordingly,slanDC depletion completely abrogated the capacity to produce both IL-12p70 and IFNgamma in response to LPS plus IL-2 by slanDC-containing NK cells. Taken together,our data uncover that two commercially available kits,specifically designed to isolate NK cells by negative selection,also co-purify variable amounts of slanDC. The latter cells may dramatically affect the outcome of experiments carried on to evaluate NK cell responsiveness to TLR agonists such as LPS.
View Publication
产品号#:
19055
19055RF
产品名:
EasySep™人NK细胞富集试剂盒
RoboSep™ 人NK细胞富集试剂盒含滤芯吸头
Pende D et al. (MAR 2009)
Blood 113 13 3119--29
Anti-leukemia activity of alloreactive NK cells in KIR ligand-mismatched haploidentical HSCT for pediatric patients: evaluation of the functional role of activating KIR and redefinition of inhibitory KIR specificity.
We analyzed 21 children with leukemia receiving haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (haplo-HSCT) from killer immunoglobulin (Ig)-like receptors (KIR) ligand-mismatched donors. We showed that,in most transplantation patients,variable proportions of donor-derived alloreactive natural killer (NK) cells displaying anti-leukemia activity were generated and maintained even late after transplantation. This was assessed through analysis of donor KIR genotype,as well as through phenotypic and functional analyses of NK cells,both at the polyclonal and clonal level. Donor-derived KIR2DL1(+) NK cells isolated from the recipient displayed the expected capability of selectively killing C1/C1 target cells,including patient leukemia blasts. Differently,KIR2DL2/3(+) NK cells displayed poor alloreactivity against leukemia cells carrying human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles belonging to C2 group. Unexpectedly,this was due to recognition of C2 by KIR2DL2/3,as revealed by receptor blocking experiments and by binding assays of soluble KIR to HLA-C transfectants. Remarkably,however,C2/C2 leukemia blasts were killed by KIR2DL2/3(+) (or by NKG2A(+)) NK cells that coexpressed KIR2DS1. This could be explained by the ability of KIR2DS1 to directly recognize C2 on leukemia cells. A role of the KIR2DS2 activating receptor in leukemia cell lysis could not be demonstrated. Altogether,these results may have important clinical implications for the selection of optimal donors for haplo-HSCT.
View Publication
NAP-2 Secreted by Human NK Cells Can Stimulate Mesenchymal Stem/Stromal Cell Recruitment.
Strategies for improved homing of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to a place of injury are being sought and it has been shown that natural killer (NK) cells can stimulate MSC recruitment. Here,we studied the chemokines behind this recruitment. Assays were performed with bone marrow human MSCs and NK cells freshly isolated from healthy donor buffy coats. Supernatants from MSC-NK cell co-cultures can induce MSC recruitment but not to the same extent as when NK cells are present. Antibody arrays and ELISA assays confirmed that NK cells secrete RANTES (CCL5) and revealed that human NK cells secrete NAP-2 (CXCL7),a chemokine that can induce MSC migration. Inhibition with specific antagonists of CXCR2,a receptor that recognizes NAP-2,abolished NK cell-mediated MSC recruitment. This capacity of NK cells to produce chemokines that stimulate MSC recruitment points toward a role for this immune cell population in regulating tissue repair/regeneration.
View Publication