Abstract

After undergoing heart transplantation and the subsequent compulsive immunosuppressive treatments, patients are at risk of rejection episodes, infectious complications or cancer development. Thus, it is probable that the various subsets of peripheral cytotoxic lymphocytes are modulated in such patients. This area of study can now be investigated by examining the numerous recently described natural killer (NK)-cell-related surface receptors. A prospective cohort of 60 heart transplant recipients and 60 controls was studied. The partitioning of lymphocyte subsets, especially NK (CD3-/CD56+), T (CD3+/CD56-) and NKT-like (CD3+/CD56+) cells, was compared in both groups using multi-parametric flow cytometry. Moreover, expression of a series of seven NK-related receptors was compared on the three subsets defined by CD56 expression. A significant increase in NK-cell levels was observed in transplanted patients, as compared with controls, whereas T and NKT-like cells were in similar proportions in both groups. Two NK-related receptors showed significantly different levels of expression in heart transplant recipients: the cytotoxic effector, CD244, which was in a significantly increased proportion on T and NKT-like cells; and the activating receptor, CD161, which was expressed significantly less on NK and NKT-like cells, but more on T cells. These findings indicate that cytotoxic NK-related cells, increased in proportion, also display increased levels of activity-associated markers in heart transplant recipients. Viral infection or the immunosuppressive regimen could be responsible for the modulation of regulatory receptors on NK and NKT-like cells in heart transplant recipients.

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