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Notch Regulates Innate Lymphoid Cell Plasticity during Human NK Cell Development

Ansel P. Nalin, Jesse Kowalski, Alexander C. Sprague, Blaire K. Schumacher, Adam Gerhardt, Youssef Youssef, Kiran V. Vedantam, Xiaoli Zhang, Christian W. Siebel, Emily M. Mace, Michael A. Caligiuri, Bethany L. Mundy-Bosse, Aharon G. Freud

2020The Journal of Immunology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Human NK cells develop in tonsils through discrete NK cell developmental intermediates (NKDIs), yet the mechanistic regulation of this process is unclear. We demonstrate that Notch activation in human tonsil-derived stage 3 (CD34−CD117+CD94−NKp80−) and 4A (CD34−CD117+/−CD94+NKp80−) NKDIs promoted non–NK innate lymphoid cell differentiation at the expense of NK cell differentiation. In contrast, stage 4B (CD34−CD117+/−CD94+NKp80+) NKDIs were NK cell lineage committed despite Notch activation. Interestingly, whereas NK cell functional maturation from stage 3 and 4A NKDIs was independent of Notch activation, the latter was required for high NKp80 expression and a stage 4B–like phenotype by the NKDI-derived NK cells. The Notch-dependent effects required simultaneous engagement with OP9 stromal cells and were also stage-specific, with NOTCH1 and NOTCH2 receptors regulating stage 3 NKDIs and NOTCH1 primarily regulating stage 4A NKDIs. These data establish stage-specific and stromal-dependent roles for Notch in regulating human NK cell developmental plasticity and maturation.

Topics & Concepts

Cell biologyInnate lymphoid cellStromal cellBiologyNotch signaling pathwayCellNatural killer cellCellular differentiationImmunologyCancer researchSignal transductionInnate immune systemImmune systemCytotoxicityIn vitroGeneticsGeneImmune Cell Function and InteractionIL-33, ST2, and ILC PathwaysT-cell and B-cell Immunology