| Literature DB >> 9317166 |
J D Seebach1, C Comrack, S Germana, C LeGuern, D H Sachs, H DerSimonian.
Abstract
There is increasing evidence that NK cells make an important contribution to human anti-porcine xenogeneic cytotoxicity. Most allogeneic as well as autologous normal cells are not susceptible to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity because they express inhibitory molecules encoded within the MHC class I loci. The protective signal is delivered to NK cells through killer cell-inhibitory receptors expressing different MHC class I specificities. It has been proposed that xenogeneic target cells may be susceptible to NK cell-mediated lysis because their MHC class I molecules fail to be recognized by human killer cell-inhibitory receptors. To explore this hypothesis, we examined the effect of human MHC class I expression on porcine target cell lysis by human NK cells. An immortalized porcine bone marrow-derived endothelial cell line (2A2) was transfected with three different human MHC class I allelic genes (HLA-A2, -B27, or -Cw3). The cytotoxic activity of several GL183+ NK clones, which lysed untransfected porcine cells effectively, was substantially blocked by the presence of HLA-Cw3. In contrast, HLA-Cw3-positive cells were not protected against lysis by GL183- EB6+ NK clones. The expression of HLA-B27 or HLA-A2 molecules on pig target cells did not provide substantial protection from lysis by any of the NK clones tested. In addition to confirming the hypothetical basis of NK cell-mediated killing of xenogeneic targets, these results have practical implications as an approach to overcoming NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity, which may be an obstacle to pig-to-human xenotransplantation.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9317166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422