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Survival in acute myeloid leukemia is associated with NKp44 splice variants

NKp44 is a receptor encoded by the NCR2 gene, which is expressed by cytokine-activated natural killer (NK) cells that are involved in anti-AML immunity. NKp44 has three splice variants corresponding to NKp44(ITIM+) (NKp44-1) and NKp44(ITIM−) (NKp44-2, and NKp44-3) isoforms. RNAseq data of AML patien...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shemesh, Avishai, Brusilovsky, Michael, Hadad, Uzi, Teltsh, Omri, Edri, Avishay, Rubin, Eitan, Campbell, Kerry S., Rosental, Benyamin, Porgador, Angel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5078064/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27102296
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.8782
Descripción
Sumario:NKp44 is a receptor encoded by the NCR2 gene, which is expressed by cytokine-activated natural killer (NK) cells that are involved in anti-AML immunity. NKp44 has three splice variants corresponding to NKp44(ITIM+) (NKp44-1) and NKp44(ITIM−) (NKp44-2, and NKp44-3) isoforms. RNAseq data of AML patients revealed similar survival of NKp46(+)NKp44(+) and NKp46(+)NKp44(−) patients. However, if grouped according to the NKp44 splice variant profile, NKp44-1 expression was significantly associated with poor survival of AML patients. Moreover, activation of PBMC from healthy controls showed co-dominant expression of NKp44-1 and NKp44-3, while primary NK clones show more diverse NKp44 splice variant profiles. Cultured primary NK cells resulted in NKp44-1 dominance and impaired function associated with PCNA over-expression by target cells. This impaired functional phenotype could be rescued by blocking of NKp44 receptor. Human NK cell lines revealed co-dominant expression of NKp44-1 and NKp44-3 and showed a functional phenotype that was not inhibited by PCNA over-expression. Furthermore, transfection-based overexpression of NKp44-1, but not NKp44-2/NKp44-3, reversed the endogenous resistance of NK-92 cells to PCNA-mediated inhibition, and resulted in poor formation of stable lytic immune synapses. This research contributes to the understanding of AML prognosis by shedding new light on the functional implications of differential splicing of NKp44.