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Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D

Natural killer (NK) cells play a vital role in xenotransplantation rejection. One approach to induce NK cell immune tolerance is to prevent the NK cell-mediated direct killing of porcine cells by targeting the interaction of the activating receptor NKG2D and its ligands. However, the identity of por...

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Autores principales: Lopez, Kevin J., Spence, John Paul, Li, Wei, Zhang, Wenjun, Wei, Barry, Cross-Najafi, Arthur A., Butler, James R., Cooper, David K. C., Ekser, Burcin, Li, Ping
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10670462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37998322
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12222587
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author Lopez, Kevin J.
Spence, John Paul
Li, Wei
Zhang, Wenjun
Wei, Barry
Cross-Najafi, Arthur A.
Butler, James R.
Cooper, David K. C.
Ekser, Burcin
Li, Ping
author_facet Lopez, Kevin J.
Spence, John Paul
Li, Wei
Zhang, Wenjun
Wei, Barry
Cross-Najafi, Arthur A.
Butler, James R.
Cooper, David K. C.
Ekser, Burcin
Li, Ping
author_sort Lopez, Kevin J.
collection PubMed
description Natural killer (NK) cells play a vital role in xenotransplantation rejection. One approach to induce NK cell immune tolerance is to prevent the NK cell-mediated direct killing of porcine cells by targeting the interaction of the activating receptor NKG2D and its ligands. However, the identity of porcine ligands for the human NKG2D receptor has remained elusive. Previous studies on porcine UL-16 binding protein 1 (pULBP-1) as a ligand for human NKG2D have yielded contradictory results. The goal of the present study was to clarify the role of pULBP-1 in the immune response and its interaction with human NKG2D receptor. To accomplish this, the CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing tool was employed to disrupt the porcine ULBP-1 gene in a 5-gene knockout porcine endothelial cell line (GGTA1, CMAH, β4galNT2, SLA-I α chain, and β-2 microglobulin, 5GKO). A colony with two allele mutations in pULBP-1 was established as a 6-gene knockout pig cell line (6GKO). We found that pULBP-1-deficient pig cells exhibited a reduced binding capacity to human NKG2D-Fc, a recombinant chimera protein. However, the removal of ULBP-1 from porcine endothelial cells did not significantly impact human NK cell degranulation or cytotoxicity upon stimulation with the pig cells. These findings conclusively demonstrate that pULBP-1 is not a crucial ligand for initiating xenogeneic human NK cell activation.
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spelling pubmed-106704622023-11-07 Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D Lopez, Kevin J. Spence, John Paul Li, Wei Zhang, Wenjun Wei, Barry Cross-Najafi, Arthur A. Butler, James R. Cooper, David K. C. Ekser, Burcin Li, Ping Cells Article Natural killer (NK) cells play a vital role in xenotransplantation rejection. One approach to induce NK cell immune tolerance is to prevent the NK cell-mediated direct killing of porcine cells by targeting the interaction of the activating receptor NKG2D and its ligands. However, the identity of porcine ligands for the human NKG2D receptor has remained elusive. Previous studies on porcine UL-16 binding protein 1 (pULBP-1) as a ligand for human NKG2D have yielded contradictory results. The goal of the present study was to clarify the role of pULBP-1 in the immune response and its interaction with human NKG2D receptor. To accomplish this, the CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing tool was employed to disrupt the porcine ULBP-1 gene in a 5-gene knockout porcine endothelial cell line (GGTA1, CMAH, β4galNT2, SLA-I α chain, and β-2 microglobulin, 5GKO). A colony with two allele mutations in pULBP-1 was established as a 6-gene knockout pig cell line (6GKO). We found that pULBP-1-deficient pig cells exhibited a reduced binding capacity to human NKG2D-Fc, a recombinant chimera protein. However, the removal of ULBP-1 from porcine endothelial cells did not significantly impact human NK cell degranulation or cytotoxicity upon stimulation with the pig cells. These findings conclusively demonstrate that pULBP-1 is not a crucial ligand for initiating xenogeneic human NK cell activation. MDPI 2023-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10670462/ /pubmed/37998322 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12222587 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lopez, Kevin J.
Spence, John Paul
Li, Wei
Zhang, Wenjun
Wei, Barry
Cross-Najafi, Arthur A.
Butler, James R.
Cooper, David K. C.
Ekser, Burcin
Li, Ping
Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D
title Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D
title_full Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D
title_fullStr Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D
title_full_unstemmed Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D
title_short Porcine UL-16 Binding Protein 1 Is Not a Functional Ligand for the Human Natural Killer Cell Activating Receptor NKG2D
title_sort porcine ul-16 binding protein 1 is not a functional ligand for the human natural killer cell activating receptor nkg2d
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10670462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37998322
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12222587
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