Abstract

NK cells are crucial components of the innate immune system due to their capacity to exert rapid cytotoxic and immunomodulatory function in the absence of prior sensitization. NK cells can become activated by exposure to target cells and/or by cytokines produced by antigen-presenting cells. In this study, we examined the effects of a simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) vaccine regimen and subsequent SIV infection on the cytotoxic and immunomodulatory functions of circulatory NK cells. While vaccination did not significantly impact the capacity of NK cells to kill MHC-devoid 721.221 target cells, SIV-infection led to a significant decrease in target cell killing. NK cells from uninfected macaques were responsive to a low dose (5 ng/ml) of IL-15 pre-activation, leading to significant increases in their cytotoxic potential, however, NK cells from SIV-infected macaques required a higher dose (50 ng/ml) of IL-15 pre-activation in order to significantly increase their cytotoxic potential. By contrast, no differences were observed in the capacity of NK cells from vaccinated and SIV-infected macaques to respond to IL-12 and IL-18. Similarly, NK cells both before and after infection exhibited equivalent responses to Fc-mediated activation. Collectively, our results show that early SIV-infection impairs the natural cytotoxic capacity of circulatory NK cells without affecting Fc-mediated or cytokine-producing function.

Highlights

  • NK cells participate in early control of viral infection through their capacity to exert rapid cytolytic and immunoregulatory functions [1]

  • We investigated the effects of vaccination and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection on the functionality of circulatory NK cells (CD3−CD8+NKG2A+ lymphocytes)

  • Given that NK cells can modulate the adaptive immune response by activating or inhibiting T cell responses [20], and due to their potential to rapidly respond to virus infection [21], we evaluated the capacity of circulatory NK cells from vaccinated and SIV-infected macaques to respond to different exogenous cytokine stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

NK cells participate in early control of viral infection through their capacity to exert rapid cytolytic and immunoregulatory functions [1]. Their functional activity is tightly controlled by the balance of inhibitory and activatory signals engaged via various cell surface receptors [2, 3]. Differential expression of these inhibitory and activatory receptors gives rise to NK cell heterogeneity and allows NK cells to respond to various stimuli [4]. For human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, viremia has been correlated with an expansion of CD16+ NK cells that exhibit anergy and decreased cytotoxic potential [7,8,9]

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