Litcius/Paper detail

Control of human cytomegalovirus replication by liver resident natural killer cells

Calum Forrest, T Chase, Antonia O. Cuff, Dionas Maroulis, Reza Motallebzadeh, Amir Gander, Brian R Davidson, Paul Griffiths, Victoria Male, Matthew B. Reeves

2023Nature Communications25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Natural killer cells are considered to be important for control of human cytomegalovirus- a major pathogen in immune suppressed transplant patients. Viral infection promotes the development of an adaptive phenotype in circulating natural killer cells that changes their anti-viral function. In contrast, less is understood how natural killer cells that reside in tissue respond to viral infection. Here we show natural killer cells resident in the liver have an altered phenotype in cytomegalovirus infected individuals and display increased anti-viral activity against multiple viruses in vitro and identify and characterise a subset of natural killer cells responsible for control. Crucially, livers containing natural killer cells with better capacity to control cytomegalovirus replication in vitro are less likely to experience viraemia post-transplant. Taken together, these data suggest that virally induced expansion of tissue resident natural killer cells in the donor organ can reduce the chance of viraemia post-transplant.

Topics & Concepts

Replication (statistics)VirologyCytomegalovirusHuman cytomegalovirusViral replicationBiologyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)HerpesviridaeVirusViral diseaseImmune Cell Function and InteractionCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus researchT-cell and B-cell Immunology