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Publication : NFIL3 Expression Distinguishes Tissue-Resident NK Cells and Conventional NK-like Cells in the Mouse Submandibular Glands.

First Author  Erick TK Year  2016
Journal  J Immunol Volume  197
Issue  6 Pages  2485-91
PubMed ID  27521341 Mgi Jnum  J:295462
Mgi Id  MGI:6460587 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1601099
Citation  Erick TK, et al. (2016) NFIL3 Expression Distinguishes Tissue-Resident NK Cells and Conventional NK-like Cells in the Mouse Submandibular Glands. J Immunol 197(6):2485-91
abstractText  The submandibular salivary gland (SMG), a major site of persistent infection for many viruses, contains a large NK cell population. Using NFIL3-deficient mice, PLZF reporter/fate mapping mice, and mixed bone marrow chimeras, we identified two distinct populations of NK cells in the SMG. Although phenotypically unique, the main population relies on NFIL3, but not PLZF, for development and, therefore, is developmentally similar to the conventional NK cell subset. In contrast, we found that approximately one quarter of the SMG NK cells develop independently of NFIL3. Interestingly, NFIL3-independent SMG tissue-resident NK (trNK) cells are developmentally distinct from liver trNK cells. We also demonstrated that the SMG NK cell hyporesponsive phenotype during murine CMV infection is tissue specific and not cell intrinsic. In contrast, NFIL3-independent SMG trNK cells are intrinsically hyporesponsive. Altogether, our data show that the SMG tissue environment shapes a unique repertoire of NK-like cells with distinct phenotypes.
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