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Differential IL-12 signaling induces human natural killer cell activating receptor-mediated ligand-specific expansion

Avishai Shemesh, Harry Pickering, Kole T. Roybal, Lewis L. Lanier

2022The Journal of Experimental Medicine53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

IL-12 is an essential cytokine involved in the generation of memory or memory-like NK cells. Mouse cytomegalovirus infection triggers NK receptor-induced, ligand-specific IL-12-dependent NK cell expansion, yet specific IL-12 stimulation ex vivo leading to NK cell proliferation and expansion is not established. Here, we show that IL-12 alone can sustain human primary NK cell survival without providing IL-2 or IL-15 but was insufficient to promote human NK cell proliferation. IL-12 signaling analysis revealed STAT5 phosphorylation and weak mTOR activation, which was enhanced by activating NK receptor upregulation and crosslinking leading to STAT5-dependent, rapamycin-sensitive, or TGFβ-sensitive NK cell IL-12-dependent expansion, independently of IL-12 receptor upregulation. Prolonged IL-2 culture did not impair IL-12-dependent ligand-specific NK cell expansion. These findings demonstrate that activating NK receptor stimulation promotes differential IL-12 signaling, leading to human NK cell expansion, and suggest adopting strategies to provide IL-12 signaling in vivo for ligand-specific IL-2-primed NK cell-based therapies.

Topics & Concepts

Cell biologyInterleukin 15STAT5Downregulation and upregulationBiologyInterleukin 12Signal transductionInterleukin 21Janus kinase 3Natural killer cellT cellCancer researchCytokineImmunologyInterleukinImmune systemCytotoxic T cellIn vitroBiochemistryGeneImmune Cell Function and InteractionT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research
Differential IL-12 signaling induces human natural killer cell activating receptor-mediated ligand-specific expansion | Litcius