Malaria-driven expansion of adaptive-like functional CD56-negative NK cells correlates with clinical immunity to malaria

疟疾驱动的适应性样功能性CD56阴性NK细胞扩增与疟疾的临床免疫力相关

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作者:Maureen Ty ,Shenghuan Sun ,Perri C Callaway ,John Rek ,Kathleen D Press ,Kattria van der Ploeg ,Jason Nideffer ,Zicheng Hu ,Sandy Klemm ,William Greenleaf ,Michele Donato ,Stephen Tukwasibwe ,Emmanuel Arinaitwe ,Felistas Nankya ,Kenneth Musinguzi ,Dean Andrew ,Lauren de la Parte ,Diego Martinez Mori ,Savannah N Lewis ,Saki Takahashi ,Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer ,Bryan Greenhouse ,Catherine Blish ,P J Utz ,Purvesh Khatri ,Grant Dorsey ,Moses Kamya ,Michelle Boyle ,Margaret Feeney ,Isaac Ssewanyana ,Prasanna Jagannathan

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells likely play an important role in immunity to malaria, but the effect of repeated malaria on NK cell responses remains unclear. Here, we comprehensively profiled the NK cell response in a cohort of 264 Ugandan children. Repeated malaria exposure was associated with expansion of an atypical, CD56neg population of NK cells that differed transcriptionally, epigenetically, and phenotypically from CD56dim NK cells, including decreased expression of PLZF and the Fc receptor γ-chain, increased histone methylation, and increased protein expression of LAG-3, KIR, and LILRB1. CD56neg NK cells were highly functional and displayed greater antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity than CD56dim NK cells. Higher frequencies of CD56neg NK cells were associated with protection against symptomatic malaria and high parasite densities. After marked reductions in malaria transmission, frequencies of these cells rapidly declined, suggesting that continuous exposure to Plasmodium falciparum is required to maintain this modified, adaptive-like NK cell subset.

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