Abstract

The lymphocyte lineage natural killer (NK) cell is part of the innate immune system and protects against pathogens and tumor cells. NK cells are the main cell effectors of the monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that mediates antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity (ADCC). Hence, it is relevant to understand NK physiology and status to investigate the biological effect of mAbs in the clinic. NK cells are heterogeneous with multiple subsets that may have specific activity against different attacks. The presence of viral-sculpted NK cell populations has already been described, but the presence of cancer-sculpted NK cells remains unknown. Cancer induces a broad NK cell dysfunction, which has not been linked to a specific population. Here, we investigated the NK cell population by Uniform Manifold Approximation and Projection (UMAP) embed maps in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients at diagnosis and at least 30 days after treatment, which correlates with tumor cell clearance. We found that the NK lineage largely responded to the tumor by generating antitumor NK cells and renewing the population with a subset of immature NK cells. However, we failed to identify a specific “memory-like” subset with the NK cell markers used. Moreover, in patients in relapse, we found essentially the same NK populations as those found at diagnosis, suggesting that NK cells equally respond to the first or second tumor rise. Finally, we observed that previous cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection largely affects the tumor-associated changes in NK population, but the CMV-associated CD57+NKG2C+ NK cell population does not appear to play any role in tumor immunity.

Highlights

  • The innate lymphocyte lineage natural killer (NK) cell protects against multiple pathogens and tumor cells [1]

  • After treatment and tumor clearing, there was a marked decrease in the percentage of CD45RARO, which is logically associated to a decrease of NK cells that had performed trogocytosis or degranulated

  • To investigate how the chronic presence of tumor target cells and their subsequent clearance after treatment affect the NK cell population, we used a cohort of 21 patients from the Hematology

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Summary

Introduction

The innate lymphocyte lineage natural killer (NK) cell protects against multiple pathogens and tumor cells [1]. After treatment and tumor clearing, there was a marked decrease in the percentage of CD45RARO, which is logically associated to a decrease of NK cells that had performed trogocytosis or degranulated The presence of this antitumor NK population has not been studied in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients. NK cells can mediate adaptive-like immune responses in humanized mice [23], but how the whole NK population adapts to the chronic presence of targets such as tumor cells in humans is unknown. We investigated it in HL and AML patients by using multiparameter flow cytometry and processed data by Uniform. This suggests that these populations depend on the presence of targets, and the presence of long-lasting populations is unclear

Ethical Statement
HL and AML Patients
Clinical Criteria for CMV-Seropositive Patients
High Dimensional Reduction Analysis
Correlation Matrix Analysis
Statistical Analysis
Results
Effect of CMV Infection on NK Subsets in HL Patients
NK Cells Subsets in AML Patients
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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