Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections impair plasmacytoid dendritic cell (PDC) and natural killer (NK) cell subset numbers and functions,though little is known about PDC-NK cell interactions during these infections. We evaluated PDC-dependent NK cell killing and gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) and granzyme B production,using peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC)-based and purified cell assays of samples from HCV- and HIV-infected subjects. CpG-enhanced PBMC killing and IFN-gamma and granzyme B activity (dependent on PDC and NK cells) were impaired in viremic HIV infection. In purified PDC-NK cell culture experiments,CpG-enhanced,PDC-dependent NK cell activity was cell contact and IFN-alpha dependent,and this activity was impaired in viremic HIV infection but not in HCV infection. In heterologous PDC-NK cell assays,impaired PDC-NK cell killing activity was largely attributable to an NK cell defect,while impaired PDC-NK cell IFN-gamma-producing activity was attributable to both PDC and NK cell defects. Additionally,the response of NK cells to direct IFN-alpha stimulation was defective in viremic HIV infection,and this defect was not attributable to diminished IFN-alpha receptor expression,though IFN-alpha receptor and NKP30 expression was closely associated with killer activity in viremic HIV infection but not in healthy controls. These data indicate that during uncontrolled HIV infection,PDC-dependent NK cell function is impaired,which is in large part attributable to defective IFN-alpha-induced NK cell activity and not to altered IFN-alpha receptor,NKP30,NKP44,NKP46,or NKG2D expression.
View Publication