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Wiley, European Journal of Immunology, 5(40), p. 1440-1450, 2010

DOI: 10.1002/eji.200940062

Wiley, European Journal of Immunology, 6(40), p. 1819-1819

DOI: 10.1002/eji.201090030

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CD8 + NK cells are predominant in chimpanzees, characterized by high NCR expression and cytokine production, and preserved in chronic HIV‐1 infection

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

HIV-1 infection in humans results in an early and progressive NK cell dysfunction and an accumulation of an "anergic" CD56- CD16+ NK subset, which is characterised by low natural cytotoxicity receptor expression and low cytokine producing capacity. In contrast to humans, chimpanzee NK cells do not display a distinguishable CD56(bright) and CD56(dim) subset but, as shown here, could be subdivided into functionally different CD8+ and CD8- subsets. The CD8+ NK cells expressed significantly higher levels of triggering receptors including NKp46 and, upon in vitro activation, produced more IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha and CD107 than their CD8- counterparts. In addition, chimpanzee CD8- NK cells had relatively high levels of HLA-DR expression, suggestive of an activated state. Killing inhibitory receptors were expressed only at low levels; however, upon in vitro stimulation, they were up-regulated in CD8+ but not in CD8- NK cells and were functionally capable of inhibiting NKp30-triggered killing. In contrast to HIV-1-infected humans, infected chimpanzees maintained their dominant CD8+ NK cell population, with high expression of natural cytotoxicity receptors.