Literature DB >> 12891535

Human small-intestinal epithelium contains functional natural killer lymphocytes.

Francisco León1, Ernesto Roldán, Laura Sanchez, Cristina Camarero, Alfredo Bootello, Garbiñe Roy.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: CD3(-) non-T lymphocytes constitute the second most abundant lymphoid subset in the human small-bowel epithelium, and these CD3(-) intraepithelial lymphocytes are virtually absent in active celiac disease. Phenotypically, they resemble natural killer cells and have been termed natural killer-like intraepithelial lymphocytes. Because of the limited availability of appropriate human samples, functional studies have not yet been reported, and it is not yet clear whether these are true natural killer cells.
METHODS: We used magnetic bead-based purification and flow cytometry to study several aspects of normal human small-bowel natural killer-like intraepithelial lymphocytes: intracellular cytokine content (basally and after activation); ability to lyse natural killer-sensitive K562 target cells; and expression of perforins, Fas ligand, and other functional markers.
RESULTS: CD3(-) intraepithelial lymphocytes cultured in interleukin-2 showed a higher lymphokine-activated killer activity than CD3(+) intraepithelial lymphocytes (48%-83% lysis exerted by CD3(-) intraepithelial lymphocytes at an effector-target cell ratio of 2:1 vs. 8%-18% by CD3(+) intraepithelial lymphocytes). Perforin content correlated with this lytic potential (75% +/- 4% in CD3(-) vs. 5% +/- 4% in CD3(+) intraepithelial lymphocytes). Both CD3(-) and CD3(+) cells displayed a type I cytokine profile (interferon-gamma > tumor necrosis factor-alpha > interleukin-2; undetectable interleukin-4 and interleukin-10). In addition to their activated phenotype, subsets of natural killer-like intraepithelial lymphocytes expressed CD8alphaalpha and intracellular CD3epsilon chain, showing the existence of heterogeneity within this cell lineage.
CONCLUSIONS: This is the first demonstration of functional natural killer cells within the human gut epithelium. These cells might play an important role in innate mucosal immunity (host defense and tumor surveillance) and tolerance.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12891535     DOI: 10.1016/s0016-5085(03)00886-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterology        ISSN: 0016-5085            Impact factor:   22.682


  35 in total

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