| Literature DB >> 32153593 |
Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells are the most abundant lymphocytes at the maternal-fetal interface. Epidemiological data implicate NK cells in human pregnancy outcomes. Discoveries using mouse NK cells have guided subsequent advances in human NK cell biology. However, it remains challenging to identify mouse and human uterine NK (uNK) cell function(s) because of the dynamic changes in the systemic-endocrinological and local uterine structural microenvironments during pregnancy. This review discusses functional similarities and differences between mouse and human NK cells at the maternal-fetal interface.Entities:
Keywords: conventional NK cells; maternal-fetal interface; pregnancy; tissue-resident NK cells; uterine NK cells
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32153593 PMCID: PMC7046796 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Immunological interfaces of the mouse and human placentas. Schematic diagram of placenta positioned with maternal tissues above fetal tissues. The murine (left panel) and human (right panel) placenta. The top inset (I) shows the cellular components of midgestation decidua basalis. In mouse and human decidua basalis, NK cell subsets are in close contact with decidua cells, invading interstitial trophoblast cells and other immune cells such as macrophages and dendritic cells. The bottom inset (II) shows the interhemal membrane unit in the placental labyrinth and chorionic villi. The sinusoidal trophoblast giant cells (mouse) and syncytiotrophoblast cells (human) line the maternal blood sinus and are exposed to circulating immune cells among them, cNK cells. In human placentas, the bottom inset (III), shows the endovascular trophoblast invasion where EVTs remodel the maternal vasculature and are exposed to circulating immune cells. Abbreviations in figure: parietal trophoblast giant cells (P-TGCs), junctional zone (JZ), tissue-resident NK cell (trNK), conventional NK cell (cNK), peripheral blood (pNK) cells, decidual NK (dNK) cells, extravillous trophoblasts (EVT).
Figure 2Parabiosis model. (A) Schematic of two congenically marked animals that were surgically joined together. C57BL/6J (CD45.2) mice were parabiosed to congenic B6-Ly5.1 (CD45.1) mice. The organs were harvested on day 14 post-parabiosis surgery and analyzed using flow cytometry. A representative dot plot of the virgin uterus (B) or spleen (C) gated on live CD3− CD4− NK1.1+ cells followed by a CD45.1 gate (left panels) and CD45.2 gate (right panels) in the CD45.1 parabiont. The percentages of CD49a+ and DX-5+ are depicted in the dot plots.