Literature DB >> 16493049

Expression of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored CD59 on target cells enhances human NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity.

Nader Omidvar1, Eddie C Y Wang, Paul Brennan, M Paula Longhi, Richard A G Smith, B Paul Morgan.   

Abstract

NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity of target cells is the result of a balance between the activating and inhibitory signals provided by their respective ligand-receptor interactions. In our current study, we have investigated the significance of CD59 on human target cells in modulating this process. A range of CD59 site-specific Abs were used in NK cytotoxicity blocking studies against the CD59-expressing K562 target cell line. Significantly reduced cytotoxicity was observed in the presence of Abs previously shown to lack blocking capacity for C-mediated lysis. We investigated the consequences for alternative membrane attachment modalities, namely bis-myristoylated-peptidyl (BiMP) and GPI anchoring, on CD59-negative U937 cells. Expression of GPI-anchored CD59 either via transfection or incorporation rendered U937 targets more susceptible to NK cytotoxicity, whereas incorporation of CD59 via a BiMP anchor to similar levels did not alter susceptibility to NK cytotoxicity. Localization of both BiMP- and GPI-anchored CD59 proteins was shown to be within the lipid raft microdomain. A role for the GPI anchor and independence from glycosylation status was confirmed by expression of transmembrane-anchored CD59 or unglycosylated CD59 and by testing in NK cytotoxicity assays. To investigate mechanisms, we compared the signaling capacity of the various forms of expressed and incorporated CD59 following Ab cross-linking in calcium flux assays. GPI-anchored CD59, with or without glycosylation, mediated activation events, whereas CD59 forms lacking the GPI anchor did not. The data show that the increased susceptibility of target cells expressing CD59 to NK cytotoxicity requires GPI anchor-mediating signaling events, likely mediated by interactions between GPI-anchored CD59 on targets and NK receptors.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16493049      PMCID: PMC2843080          DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.176.5.2915

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  38 in total

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2.  Delta-short consensus repeat 4-decay accelerating factor (DAF: CD55) inhibits complement-mediated cytolysis but not NK cell-mediated cytolysis.

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Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2004-09-15       Impact factor: 5.422

Review 3.  The GPI-anchor and protein sorting.

Authors:  S Chatterjee; S Mayor
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4.  Downregulation of NK cell-mediated swine endothelial cell lysis by DAF (CD55).

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Review 5.  Transmembrane adapters: attractants for cytoplasmic effectors.

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Review 7.  Membrane targeting of lipid modified signal transduction proteins.

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8.  GPI-anchored GFP signals Ca2+ but is homogeneously distributed on the cell surface.

Authors:  Stephen Hiscox; Maurice B Hallett; B Paul Morgan; Carmen W van den Berg
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  2002-05-03       Impact factor: 3.575

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  8 in total

1.  Levels of expression of complement regulatory proteins CD46, CD55 and CD59 on resting and activated human peripheral blood leucocytes.

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Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2006-09-26       Impact factor: 7.397

2.  Transient GPI-anchored protein homodimers are units for raft organization and function.

Authors:  Kenichi G N Suzuki; Rinshi S Kasai; Koichiro M Hirosawa; Yuri L Nemoto; Munenori Ishibashi; Yoshihiro Miwa; Takahiro K Fujiwara; Akihiro Kusumi
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4.  Interaction kinetics with transcriptomic and secretory responses of CD19-CAR natural killer-cell therapy in CD20 resistant non-hodgkin lymphoma.

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5.  The complement system in primary Sjögren's syndrome: the expression of certain cascade and regulatory proteins in labial salivary glands - observational study.

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6.  Dynamic recruitment of phospholipase C gamma at transiently immobilized GPI-anchored receptor clusters induces IP3-Ca2+ signaling: single-molecule tracking study 2.

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Review 7.  Tumor-Associated Glycans and Immune Surveillance.

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8.  High-speed single-molecule imaging reveals signal transduction by induced transbilayer raft phases.

Authors:  Ikuko Koyama-Honda; Takahiro K Fujiwara; Rinshi S Kasai; Kenichi G N Suzuki; Eriko Kajikawa; Hisae Tsuboi; Taka A Tsunoyama; Akihiro Kusumi
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  8 in total

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