Direct bacterial protein PAMP recognition by human NK cells involves TLRs and triggers alpha-defensin production.
Although human CD56(+)CD3(-) natural killer (NK) cells participate in immune responses against microorganisms, their capacity to directly recognize and be activated by pathogens remains unclear. These cells encode members of the Toll-like receptor (TLR) family, involved in innate cell activation on recognition of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). We therefore evaluated whether the 2 bacterial protein PAMPs, the outer membrane protein A from Klebsiella pneumoniae (KpOmpA) and flagellin, which signal through TLR2 and TLR5, respectively, may directly stimulate human NK cells. These proteins induce interferon-gamma ( IFN-gamma) production by NK cells and synergize with interleukin-2 ( IL-2) and proinflammatory cytokines in PAMP-induced activation. Similar results were obtained using CD56(+)CD3(+) ( NKR-expressing) T cells. NK cells from TLR2(-/-) mice fail to respond to KpOmpA, demonstrating TLR involvement in this effect. Defensins are antimicrobial peptides expressed mainly by epithelial cells and neutrophils that disrupt the bacterial membrane, leading to pathogen death. We show that NK cells and NKR-expressing T cells constitutively express alpha-defensins and that KpOmpA and flagellin rapidly induce their release. These data demonstrate for the first time that highly purified NK cells directly recognize and respond to pathogen components through TLRs and evidence defensins as a novel and direct cytotoxic pathway involved in NK cell-mediated protection against microorganisms.[1]References
- Direct bacterial protein PAMP recognition by human NK cells involves TLRs and triggers alpha-defensin production. Chalifour, A., Jeannin, P., Gauchat, J.F., Blaecke, A., Malissard, M., N'Guyen, T., Thieblemont, N., Delneste, Y. Blood (2004) [Pubmed]
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