Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells express killer cell inhibitory receptors (KIRs) for major histocompatibility complex class I molecules. Engagement of these surface receptors inhibits NK cell cytotoxic programs. KIR can also be expressed on T cell subsets, and their engagement similarly results in inhibition of effector functions initiated by the CD3/T cell receptor complex. KIR genes belong to two distinct families: the immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF KIRs) and dimeric C2 lectins (lectin-like KIRs). Whereas both IgSF (p58: CD158, p70, and p140) and lectin-like KIRs (CD94/NKG2A heterodimers) have been found in human, only lectin-like KIRs (all members of the Ly-49 family) have been described in the mouse. We have generated transgenic mice expressing an IgSF KIR, CD158b (p58.2), which recognizes HLA-Cw3. Our data show that CD158b is necessary and sufficient to confer specificity to NK cells, as well as to modulate T cell activation programs in vitro. In addition, we did not detect any adaptation of CD158b cell surface expression to that of HLA class I ligands in the CD158b x HLA-Cw3 double transgenic mice, in contrast to observations with Ly-49 in the mouse. Therefore, distinct strategies of selection/calibration appear to be used by IgSF and lectin-like KIRs. Finally, the transgenic expression of CD158b KIR prevents the in vivo rejection of H-2 mismatch bone marrow grafts, which express the cognate major histocompatibility class I HLA-Cw3 allele, demonstrating for the first time the in vivo implication of human IgSF KIRs in the negative regulation of NK cell function.

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