Abstract

Cellular cytotoxicity is the hallmark of NK cells mediating both elimination of virus-infected or malignant cells, and modulation of immune responses. NK cytotoxicity is triggered upon ligation of various activating NK cell receptors. Among these is the C-type lectin-like receptor NKp80 which is encoded in the human Natural Killer Gene Complex (NKC) adjacent to its ligand, activation-induced C-type lectin (AICL). NKp80-AICL interaction promotes cytolysis of malignant myeloid cells, but also stimulates the mutual crosstalk between NK cells and monocytes. While many activating NK cell receptors pair with ITAM-bearing adaptors, we recently reported that NKp80 signals via a hemITAM-like sequence in its cytoplasmic domain. Here we molecularly dissect the NKp80 hemITAM and demonstrate that two non-consensus amino acids, in particular arginine 6, critically impair both hemITAM phosphorylation and Syk recruitment. Impaired Syk recruitment results in a substantial attenuation of cytotoxic responses upon NKp80 ligation. Reconstituting the hemITAM consensus or Syk overexpression resulted in robust NKp80-mediated responsiveness. Collectively, our data provide a molecular rationale for the restrained activation potential of NKp80 and illustrate how subtle alterations in signaling motifs determine subsequent cellular responses. They also suggest that non-consensus alterations in the NKp80 hemITAM, as commonly present among mammalian NKp80 sequences, may have evolved to dampen NKp80-mediated cytotoxic responses toward AICL-expressing cells.

Highlights

  • The activating Natural Killer (NK) receptor NKp80 triggers cytotoxicity by human NK cells via a cytoplasmic hemITAM sequence

  • Impaired Syk Recruitment by the NKp80 HemITAM in NK Cells—Recently, we reported that the immunoreceptor NKp80 triggers cytotoxicity by human NK cells via an atypical hemITAM and provided several lines of evidence for involvement of Syk kinase in the signaling pathway [10]

  • The hemITAM of NKp80 can be considered anomalous, because the two amino acids preceding the tyrosine of the hemITAM in NKp80 (ERYXXL) deviate from the hemITAM consensus (DGYXXL) deduced from the Syk-recruiting hemITAMs of Dectin-1 and CLEC-2 (Fig. 1A and [22])

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Summary

Background

The activating NK receptor NKp80 triggers cytotoxicity by human NK cells via a cytoplasmic hemITAM sequence. Our data provide a molecular rationale for the restrained activation potential of NKp80 and illustrate how subtle alterations in signaling motifs determine subsequent cellular responses They suggest that non-consensus alterations in the NKp80 hemITAM, as commonly present among mammalian NKp80 sequences, may have evolved to dampen NKp80-mediated cytotoxic responses toward AICL-expressing cells. We set out to scrutinize the hemITAM-like sequence of NKp80 for its capacity to recruit Syk and to activate NK cell cytotoxicity to obtain a better understanding of the signaling mechanisms and function of this unique human NK cell receptor

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