Abstract

BackgroundThe role of natural killer (NK) cells in granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) is poorly understood. We recently reported that peripheral blood NK cell percentages correlate with the suppression of GPA activity (cohort I). The purpose of the current study was to further characterize NK cell subsets, phenotype and function in a second GPA cohort (cohort II).MethodsPeripheral blood lymphocyte subsets were analyzed at a clinical diagnostic laboratory. Clinical data were extracted from medical records and patients were grouped according to their activity state (remission vs. active/non-remission). Separate analysis (cohort II, n = 22) and combined analysis (cohorts I and II, n = 34/57) of NK cell counts/percentages was performed. NK cell subsets and phenotypes were analyzed by multicolor flow cytometry. Cytotoxicity assays were performed using 51Cr-labeled K562 target cells.ResultsIn cohort II, NK cell counts were lower than the lower limit of normal in active GPA, despite normal percentages due to lymphopenia. NK cell counts, but not other lymphocyte counts, were significantly higher in remission. Combined analysis of cohorts I and II confirmed decreased NK cell counts in active GPA and increased percentages in long-term remission. Follow-up measurements of six patients revealed increasing NK cell percentages during successful induction therapy. Multicolor analysis from cohort II revealed that in active GPA, the CD56dim subset was responsible for decreased NK cell counts, expressed more frequently CD69, downregulated the Fc-receptor CD16 and upregulated the adhesion molecule CD54, the chemokine receptor CCR5 and the activating receptor NKG2C. In remission, these markers were unaltered or marginally altered. All other receptors investigated (NKp30, NKp44, NKp46, NKG2D, DNAM1, 2B4, CRACC, 41BB) remained unchanged. Natural cytotoxicity was not detectable in most patients with active GPA, but was restored in remission.ConclusionsNK cell numbers correlate inversely with GPA activity. Reduced CD56dim NK cells in active GPA have an activated phenotype, which intriguingly is associated with profound deficiency in cytotoxicity. These data suggest a function for NK cells in the pathogenesis and/or modulation of inflammation in GPA. NK cell numbers, phenotype (CD16, CD69, NKG2C) or overall natural cytotoxicity are promising candidates to serve as clinical biomarkers to determine GPA activity.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13075-016-1098-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The role of natural killer (NK) cells in granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) is poorly understood

  • NK cell counts were significantly lower in active GPA Lymphocyte subsets in 22 samples from 19 different patients in cohort II were analyzed

  • NK cells were inversely correlated with GPA activity Both NK cell lymphopenia in active GPA and the significantly lower NK cell counts in active vs. inactive GPA were confirmed in a combined analysis of cohort I (n = 12) and cohort II (n = 22; total = 34) after subgrouping according to either Birmingham vasculitis activity score (BVAS) (>/= 0, p = 0.0152, not shown) or activity state (Fig. 2a, left graph)

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Summary

Introduction

The role of natural killer (NK) cells in granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) is poorly understood. We recently reported that peripheral blood NK cell percentages correlate with the suppression of GPA activity (cohort I). The purpose of the current study was to further characterize NK cell subsets, phenotype and function in a second GPA cohort (cohort II). Natural killer (NK) cells make up about 5–15 % of all peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). They are tightly regulated lymphocytes with cytotoxic activity against stressed and/or antibody-coated cells [1,2,3,4]. Two major NK cell subsets are well-established: CD56bright NK cells are dominant in secondary lymphatic tissues and presumably precursors of CD56dim NK cells, which are mature cytotoxic cells and make up >90 % of blood NK cells. Important homeostatic factors are IL-15 and IL-18 [8]

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