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Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface

The non-classical HLA-G protein is distinguished from the classical MHC class I molecules by its expression pattern, low polymorphism and its ability to form complexes on the cell surface. The special role of HLA-G in the maternal-fetal interface has been attributed to its ability to interact with s...

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Autores principales: Gonen-Gross, Tsufit, Goldman-Wohl, Debra, Huppertz, Berthold, Lankry, Dikla, Greenfield, Caryn, Natanson-Yaron, Shira, Hamani, Yaron, Gilad, Ronit, Yagel, Simcha, Mandelboim, Ofer
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2812487/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126612
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008941
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author Gonen-Gross, Tsufit
Goldman-Wohl, Debra
Huppertz, Berthold
Lankry, Dikla
Greenfield, Caryn
Natanson-Yaron, Shira
Hamani, Yaron
Gilad, Ronit
Yagel, Simcha
Mandelboim, Ofer
author_facet Gonen-Gross, Tsufit
Goldman-Wohl, Debra
Huppertz, Berthold
Lankry, Dikla
Greenfield, Caryn
Natanson-Yaron, Shira
Hamani, Yaron
Gilad, Ronit
Yagel, Simcha
Mandelboim, Ofer
author_sort Gonen-Gross, Tsufit
collection PubMed
description The non-classical HLA-G protein is distinguished from the classical MHC class I molecules by its expression pattern, low polymorphism and its ability to form complexes on the cell surface. The special role of HLA-G in the maternal-fetal interface has been attributed to its ability to interact with specific receptors found on maternal immune cells. However this interaction is restricted to a limited number of receptors. In this study we elucidate the reason for this phenomenon by comparing the specific contact residues responsible for MHC-KIR interactions. This alignment revealed a marked difference between the HLA-G molecule and other MHC class I molecules. By mutating these residues to the equivalent classical MHC residues, the HLA-G molecule regained an ability of interacting with KIR inhibitory receptors found on NK cells derived either from peripheral blood or from the decidua. Functional NK killing assays further substantiated the binding results. Furthermore, double immunofluorescent staining of placental sections revealed that while the conformed form of HLA-G was expressed in all extravillous trophoblasts, the free heavy chain form of HLA-G was expressed in more distal cells of the column, the invasion front. Overall we suggest that HLA-G protein evolved to interact with only some of the NK inhibitory receptors thus allowing a control of inhibition, while permitting appropriate NK cell cytokine and growth factor production necessary for a viable maternal fetal interface.
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spelling pubmed-28124872010-02-02 Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface Gonen-Gross, Tsufit Goldman-Wohl, Debra Huppertz, Berthold Lankry, Dikla Greenfield, Caryn Natanson-Yaron, Shira Hamani, Yaron Gilad, Ronit Yagel, Simcha Mandelboim, Ofer PLoS One Research Article The non-classical HLA-G protein is distinguished from the classical MHC class I molecules by its expression pattern, low polymorphism and its ability to form complexes on the cell surface. The special role of HLA-G in the maternal-fetal interface has been attributed to its ability to interact with specific receptors found on maternal immune cells. However this interaction is restricted to a limited number of receptors. In this study we elucidate the reason for this phenomenon by comparing the specific contact residues responsible for MHC-KIR interactions. This alignment revealed a marked difference between the HLA-G molecule and other MHC class I molecules. By mutating these residues to the equivalent classical MHC residues, the HLA-G molecule regained an ability of interacting with KIR inhibitory receptors found on NK cells derived either from peripheral blood or from the decidua. Functional NK killing assays further substantiated the binding results. Furthermore, double immunofluorescent staining of placental sections revealed that while the conformed form of HLA-G was expressed in all extravillous trophoblasts, the free heavy chain form of HLA-G was expressed in more distal cells of the column, the invasion front. Overall we suggest that HLA-G protein evolved to interact with only some of the NK inhibitory receptors thus allowing a control of inhibition, while permitting appropriate NK cell cytokine and growth factor production necessary for a viable maternal fetal interface. Public Library of Science 2010-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2812487/ /pubmed/20126612 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008941 Text en Gonen-Gross et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gonen-Gross, Tsufit
Goldman-Wohl, Debra
Huppertz, Berthold
Lankry, Dikla
Greenfield, Caryn
Natanson-Yaron, Shira
Hamani, Yaron
Gilad, Ronit
Yagel, Simcha
Mandelboim, Ofer
Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface
title Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface
title_full Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface
title_fullStr Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface
title_full_unstemmed Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface
title_short Inhibitory NK Receptor Recognition of HLA-G: Regulation by Contact Residues and by Cell Specific Expression at the Fetal-Maternal Interface
title_sort inhibitory nk receptor recognition of hla-g: regulation by contact residues and by cell specific expression at the fetal-maternal interface
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2812487/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126612
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008941
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