<iframe src="//www.googletagmanager.com/ns.html?id=GTM-5TSRKG" height="0" width="0" style="display: none; visibility: hidden">
Brief Report
No access
Published Online: 9 July 2004

Factors Regulating the Cytotoxic Activity of the Human Natural Killer Cell Line, NK-92

Publication: Journal of Hematotherapy & Stem Cell Research
Volume 10, Issue Number 3

Abstract

NK-92, a highly cytotoxic, interleukin-2 (IL-2)-dependent human natural killer (NK) cell line, has been of interest for basic and translational research. We report on a comprehensive analysis of NK-92 for factors implicated in NK cytotoxicity to elucidate factors underlying NK-92's high cytolytic activity and target range. Thus, we hope to develop a method to identify patients best suited to NK-92 immunotherapy. In addition, as a model system, we hope to increase understanding of the basis for the elevated activity exhibited by activated NK (ANK) cells. NK-92 exhibits an unusual receptor expression profile, expressing a relatively large number of activating (NKp30, NKp46, 2B4, NKGD, E, CD28) receptors. Conversely, it expresses few inhibitory receptors (NKGA/B, low levels of KIR2DL4, ILT-2), lacking most of the killer inhibitory receptors (KIRs) clonally expressed on normal NK cells. In addition, NK-92 expresses high levels of molecules involved in the perforin-granzyme cytolytic pathway as well as additional cytotoxic effector molecules including tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-superfamily members FasL, TRAIL, TWEAK, TNF-α, indicating the ability to kill via alternative mechanisms. NK-92 also expresses other molecules implicated immune effector cell regulation (CD80, CD86, CD40L, TRANCE) whose relevance in NK killing is unclear. This study provides initial data to develop a method to identify NK-92 susceptible cells (cells expressing ligands for NK-92 activating receptors ie CD48 for 2B4 and CD80/86 for CD28). Furthermore, this work suggests mechanisms that may contribute to ANK cell activity, including modulation of receptor expression to favor activation, up-regulation of cytotoxic effector molecules, and acquisition of new cytolytic pathways.

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

cover image Journal of Hematotherapy & Stem Cell Research
Journal of Hematotherapy & Stem Cell Research
Volume 10Issue Number 3June 2001
Pages: 369 - 383
PubMed: 11454312

History

Published online: 9 July 2004
Published in print: June 2001

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Topics

Authors

Affiliations

Guitta Maki
Section of Bone Marrow Transplant and Cell Therapy, Rush Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Rush Medical School, Rush University Chicago, IL, 60612.
Hans-G. Klingemann
Section of Bone Marrow Transplant and Cell Therapy, Rush Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Rush Medical School, Rush University Chicago, IL, 60612.
Jeffrey A. Martinson
Section of Bone Marrow Transplant and Cell Therapy, Rush Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Rush Medical School, Rush University Chicago, IL, 60612.
Ying K. Tam
Section of Bone Marrow Transplant and Cell Therapy, Rush Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Rush Medical School, Rush University Chicago, IL, 60612.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Export citation

Select the format you want to export the citations of this publication.

View Options

Get Access

Access content

To read the fulltext, please use one of the options below to sign in or purchase access.

Society Access

If you are a member of a society that has access to this content please log in via your society website and then return to this publication.

Restore your content access

Enter your email address to restore your content access:

Note: This functionality works only for purchases done as a guest. If you already have an account, log in to access the content to which you are entitled.

View options

PDF/EPUB

View PDF/ePub

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share on social media

Back to Top