Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells are innate cytotoxic lymphocytes that efficiently eliminate malignant and virus-infected cells without prior activation via the directed and focused release of lytic granule contents for target cell lysis. This cytolytic process is tightly regulated at discrete checkpoint stages to ensure the selective killing of diseased target cells and is highly dependent on the coordinated regulation of cytoskeletal components. The actin-binding protein filamin crosslinks cortical actin filaments into orthogonal networks and links actin filament webs to cellular membranes to modulate cell migration, adhesion, and signaling. However, its role in the regulation of NK cell functions remains poorly understood. Here, we show that filamin A (FLNa), a filamin isoform with preferential expression in leukocytes, is recruited to the NK cell lytic synapse and is required for NK cell cytotoxicity through the modulation of conjugate formation with target cells, synaptic filamentous actin (F-actin) accumulation, and cytotoxic degranulation, but not granule polarization. Interestingly, we also find that the loss of FLNa augments the target cell-induced expression of IFN-γ and TNF-α by NK cells, correlating with enhanced activation signals such as Ca2+ mobilization, ERK, and NF-κB, and a delayed down-modulation of the NKG2D receptor. Thus, our results identify FLNa as a new regulator of NK cell effector functions during their decision to kill target cells through a balanced regulation of NK cell cytotoxicity vs cytokine production. Moreover, this study implicates the cross-linking/bundling of F-actin mediated by FLNa as a necessary process coordinating optimal NK effector functions.

Highlights

  • Natural killer (NK) cells are a unique subset of effector lymphocytes that provide innate surveillance against tumors and virus infections [1,2,3,4]

  • Given that filamin A (FLNa) is an filamentous actin (F-actin) cross-linking protein and that Factin reorganization contributes to lytic immunological synapse (IS) formation, we first determined the localization of FLNa and F-actin in NKL cells, a human NK cell line, upon their interaction with 721.221 target cells by immunofluorescence microscopy

  • These results indicate that FLNa is recruited to the IS in NKL cells upon their recognition of sensitive target cells and suggest the potential involvement of FLNa in the formation of the lytic IS

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Summary

Introduction

Natural killer (NK) cells are a unique subset of effector lymphocytes that provide innate surveillance against tumors and virus infections [1,2,3,4]. F-actin networks need to be disassembled to form a conduit, and lytic granules have access to the plasma membrane through this conduit for the release of their contents toward the bound target cell [8, 17, 18] Prior to this process, lytic granules are required to be converged around the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) by a microtubule minus-end-directed motor complex and be delivered to the NK-target cell interface along with the MTOC [8, 19]. Lytic granules are required to be converged around the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) by a microtubule minus-end-directed motor complex and be delivered to the NK-target cell interface along with the MTOC [8, 19] This coordination between the actin and tubulin cytoskeletons leads to the directed secretion of lytic granule contents and stimulatory cytokines at the lytic IS to promote target cell death

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