Publication | Open Access
Ionomycin Treatment Renders NK Cells Hyporesponsive
18
Citations
55
References
2016
Year
Adaptive Immune SystemImmunologyImmune RegulationBlood CellNk CellsImmunologic MechanismCd4 T Cell ResponsesInnate ImmunityImmune SystemImmunotherapyNatural Killer CellsHuman Nk CellsTumor ImmunityCell SignalingImmune SurveillanceSelf-toleranceT Cell ImmunityCell BiologyCancer ImmunosurveillanceImmunosuppressionCellular Immune ResponseMedicine
Natural killer cells are cytotoxic lymphocytes important in immune responses to cancer and multiple pathogens. However, chronic activation of NK cells can induce a hyporesponsive state. The molecular basis of the mechanisms underlying the generation and maintenance of this hyporesponsive condition are unknown, thus an easy and reproducible mechanism able to induce hyporesponsiveness on human NK cells would be very useful to gain understanding of this process. Human NK cells treated with ionomycin lose their ability to degranulate and secrete IFN-γ in response to a variety of stimuli, but IL-2 stimulation can compensate these defects. Apart from reductions in the expression of CD11a/CD18, no great changes were observed in the activating and inhibitory receptors expressed by these NK cells, however their transcriptional signature is different to that described for other hyporesponsive lymphocytes.
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