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Publication : In vivo elimination of MHC-I-deficient lymphocytes by activated natural killer cells is independent of granzymes A and B.

First Author  Regner M Year  2011
Journal  PLoS One Volume  6
Issue  8 Pages  e23252
PubMed ID  21853094 Mgi Jnum  J:176509
Mgi Id  MGI:5292149 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0023252
Citation  Regner M, et al. (2011) In vivo elimination of MHC-I-deficient lymphocytes by activated natural killer cells is independent of granzymes A and B. PLoS One 6(8):e23252
abstractText  NK cells kill target cells mainly via exocytosis of granules containing perforin (perf) and granzymes (gzm). In vitro, gzm delivery into the target cell cytosol results in apoptosis, and induction of apoptosis is severely impaired in the absence of gzm A and B. However, their importance for in vivo cytotoxicity by cytotoxic T cells has been questioned. We used an in vivo NK cytotoxicity assay, in which splenocytes from wild-type and beta(2)microglobulin-deficient (MHC-I(neg)) mice are co-injected into recipients whose NK cells were activated by virus infection or synthetic Toll-like receptor ligands. Elimination of adoptively transferred MHC-I(neg) splenocytes was unimpaired in the absence of gzmA and gzmB, but dependent on perforin. This target cell rejection was NK cell dependent, since NK cell depletion abrogated it. Furthermore, target cell elimination in vivo was equally rapid in both wild-type and gzmAxB-deficient recipients, with the majority of specific target cells lost from lymphoid tissue within less than one to two hours after transfer. Thus, similar to T cell cytotoxicity, the contribution of gzmA and B to in vivo target cell elimination remains unresolved.
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