| Literature DB >> 26594216 |
Angela Gismondi1, Helena Stabile2, Paolo Nisti2, Angela Santoni3.
Abstract
Treatment of hematological malignant disorders has been improved over the last years, but high relapse rate mainly attributable to the presence of minimal residual disease still persists. Therefore, it is of great interest to explore novel therapeutic strategies to obtain long-term remission. Immune effector cells, and especially natural killer (NK) cells, play a crucial role in the control of hematological malignancies. In this regard, the efficiency of allogeneic stem cell transplantation clearly depends on the immune-mediated graft versus leukemia effect without the risk of inducing graft versus host disease. Alloreactive donor NK cells generated following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ameliorate the outcome of leukemia patients; in addition, in vivo transfer of in vitro expanded NK cells represents a crucial tool for leukemia treatment. To improve NK cell effector functions against resistant leukemia cells, novel immunotherapeutic strategies are oriented to the identification, isolation, expansion, and administration of particular NK cell subsets endowed with multifunctional anti-tumor potential and tropism toward tumor sites. Moreover, the relationship between the emergence and persistence of distinct NK cell subsets during post-graft reconstitution and the maintenance of a remission state is still rather unclear.Entities:
Keywords: HSCT; NK cell subsets; NK cell therapy; NK cells; hematological malignancies
Year: 2015 PMID: 26594216 PMCID: PMC4633523 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1CD56.
Killer immunoglobulin-like (KIR) haplotypes.
| HLA class I ligand | Inhibitory | Activating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3DL2 | HLA-A(A*3, A*11) | + | |
| 2DS4 | HLA-C(C*5, C*16, A*11) | + | |
| 3DL1 | Bw4 | + | |
| 3DS1 | Bw4? | + | |
| 2DL4 | HLA-G | + | |
| DP1 | − | ||
| DL1 | HLA-C(C2) | + | |
| DP1 | − | ||
| DL2 | HLA-C(Cl/c2, few HLA-B) | + | |
| DL3 | HLA-C(Cl/c2, few HLA-B) | + | |
| DL3 | N.D | + | |
| 3DL2 | HLA-A(A*3, A*11) | + | |
| 2DS4 | HLA-C(C*5, C*16, A*11) | + | |
| 2DS1 | HLA-C(C2) | + | |
| 2DS3/5 | N.D | + | |
| 2DL5A | N.D | + | |
| 3DL1 | Bw4 | + | |
| 3DS1 | Bw4? | + | |
| 2DL4 | HLA-G | + | |
| DP1 | − | ||
| DL1 | HLA-C(C2) | + | |
| DP1 | − | ||
| DS3/5 | N.D | + | |
| DL5B | N.D | + | |
| DL2 | HLA-C(Cl/c2, few HLA-B) | + | |
| DL3 | HLA-C(Cl/c2, few HLA-B) | + | |
| DS2 | A11? | + | |
| DL3 | N.D | + |
Gray and white box contain telomeric and centrometric KIRs respectively; C1/c2 denotes a strong reaction with C1 and weaker cross-reaction with C2; ? denotes uncertainty.