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Single-cell profiling reveals the trajectories of natural killer cell differentiation in bone marrow and a stress signature induced by acute myeloid leukemia

Adeline Crinier, Pierre‐Yves Dumas, Bertrand Escalière, Christelle Pipéroglou, Laurine Gil, Arnaud Villacreces, Frédéric Vely, Zoran Ivanović, Pierre Milpied, Émilie Narni-Mancinelli, Éric Vivier

2020Cellular and Molecular Immunology153 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Summary Natural killer (NK) cells are innate cytotoxic lymphoid cells (ILCs) involved in the killing of infected and tumor cells. Among human and mouse NK cells from the spleen and blood, we previously identified by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) two similar major subsets, NK1 and NK2. Using the same technology, we report here the identification, by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq), of three NK cell subpopulations in human bone marrow. Pseudotime analysis identified a subset of resident CD56 bright NK cells, NK0 cells, as the precursor of both circulating CD56 dim NK1-like NK cells and CD56 bright NK2-like NK cells in human bone marrow and spleen under physiological conditions. Transcriptomic profiles of bone marrow NK cells from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) exhibited stress-induced repression of NK cell effector functions, highlighting the profound impact of this disease on NK cell heterogeneity. Bone marrow NK cells from AML patients exhibited reduced levels of CD160, but the CD160 high group had a significantly higher survival rate.

Topics & Concepts

Bone marrowLymphokine-activated killer cellSpleenNK-92CellMyeloidNatural killer cellCytotoxic T cellBiologyImmunologyK562 cellsMyeloid leukemiaCancer researchLeukemiaInterleukin 21T cellImmune systemIn vitroGeneticsBiochemistryImmune Cell Function and InteractionIL-33, ST2, and ILC PathwaysT-cell and B-cell Immunology
Single-cell profiling reveals the trajectories of natural killer cell differentiation in bone marrow and a stress signature induced by acute myeloid leukemia | Litcius