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The Traffic of the NKG2D/Dap10 Receptor Complex during Natural Killer (NK) Cell Activation
Authors:Pedro Roda-Navarro and  Hugh T Reyburn
Institution:From the Division of Immunology, Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge CB2 1QP, United Kingdom
Abstract:NKG2D is an important activating receptor for triggering the NK cell cytotoxic activity, although chronic engagement of specific ligands by NKG2D is also known to provoke decreased cell surface expression of the receptor and compromised NK cell function. We have studied the dynamics of surface NKG2D expression and how exposure to the specific ligand major histocompatibility complex class I chain-related molecule B (MICB) affects receptor traffic and fate. While in the NKL cell line and “resting” NK cells NKG2D was found principally at the cell surface, in activated primary NK cells an intracellular pool of receptor could also be found recycling to the plasma membrane. Exposure of NK cells to targets expressing MICB resulted in degradation of ~50% of total NKG2D protein and lysosomal degradation of the DAP10 adaptor molecule. Consistent with these observations, confocal microscopy experiments demonstrated that DAP10 trafficked to secretory lysosomes in both transfected NKL cells and in activated primary NK cells upon interaction with MICB-expressing target cells. Interestingly, polarization to the synapse of secretory lysosomes containing DAP10 was also observed. The implications of the intracellular traffic of the NKG2D/DAP10 receptor complex for NK cell activation are discussed. We propose that the rapid degradation of NKG2D/DAP10 observed coincident with recruitment of the receptor to the cytotoxic immune synapse may explain the loss of NKG2D receptor expression after chronic exposure to NKG2D ligands.The killer cell lectin-like receptor NKG2D is one of the best characterized NK3 cell-activating receptors. Signaling via NKG2D depends on its association with DAP10, a transmembrane adaptor molecule containing the sequence YINM, which signals via recruitment of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and Grb2 (growth factor receptor-bound protein 2) (1, 2). Effector cell activation mediated by NKG2D has been described as immune recognition of the “induced self,” because the cellular ligands for NKG2D (NKG2D-L): the polymorphic MHC class I chain-related molecules (MIC) A and MICB and the UL16-binding proteins are not normally expressed but instead are up-regulated on target cells after pathogen infection or tumor transformation to render these cells susceptible to NK cell lysis (3). Strikingly, however, although induced expression of NKG2D-L acts as a danger signal to provoke an immune response, a number of studies performed in mouse models have shown that chronic exposure to NKG2D-L can also lead to down-modulation of the surface expression of NKG2D and impaired NK cell cytotoxic function (46).In humans, a common feature of patients with multiple different tumors is the presence in the serum of high levels of soluble MICA and -B or UL16-binding proteins, released by tumor cells, that are associated with an impairment of CTL and NK cell cytotoxic function (710). These observations have been interpreted as suggesting that the release of soluble NKG2D-L is a strategy of tumor immune evasion (11). However, recent data show that receptor interaction with cell membrane-anchored MICB can also lead to impaired NKG2D function. We have shown that brief cytotoxic interactions between NK cells and MICB-expressing target cells trigger a synaptic interchange of NKG2D and MICB as well as a rapid down-modulation of surface NKG2D and compromised NK cell cytotoxicity suggesting that NKG2D traffic is rapidly altered upon recognition of MICB expressed on target cell (12).The surface level of a receptor is dictated by the relative rates of synthesis and transport to the plasma membrane and endocytosis, recycling, and degradation. The loss of cell surface NKG2D observed after NKG2D-L binding (710, 12) raises the question of what is the intracellular fate of the receptor on interaction with NKG2D-L. However, the traffic of this receptor has not been previously studied. Here we describe the dynamics of surface NKG2D expression and examine how cytotoxic interactions between NK cells and the MHC class I- 721.221 (here called 221) cells that express MICB (here called 221B) affect the traffic and fate of the NKG2D/DAP10 receptor complex. In NKL cells and resting primary NK cells NKG2D is mainly expressed at the cell surface; however, in activated primary NK cells an intracellular pool of receptor recycling to the cell surface is detected. During cytotoxic interactions the recognition of MICB expressed on target cells results in a rapid degradation of NKG2D/DAP10 that is associated with the traffic of DAP10 to secretory lysosomes (SLs) (13, 14). Our data provide new insights into the dynamics of NKG2D receptor expression in NK cells and suggest a plausible model to explain how chronic exposure to NKG2D-L could lead to NKG2D down-modulation and compromised NK cell function.
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