Abstract
We analyzed the impact of human cytomegalovirus infection on the development of natural killer cells in 27 pediatric patients affected by hematological malignancies, who had received a HLA-haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, depleted of both α/β+ T cells and B cells. In line with previous studies in adult recipients of umbilical cord blood transplantation, we found that human cytomegalovirus reactivation accelerated the emergence of mature natural killer cells. Thus, most children displayed a progressive expansion of a memory-like natural killer cell subset expressing NKG2C, a putative receptor for human cytomegalovirus, and CD57, a marker of terminal natural killer cell differentiation. NKG2C+CD57+ natural killer cells were detectable by month 3 following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and expanded until at least month 12. These cells were characterized by high killer Ig-like receptors (KIRs) and leukocyte inhibitory receptor 1 (LIR-1) and low Siglec-7, NKG2A and Interleukin-18Rα expression, killed tumor targets and responded to cells expressing HLA-E (a NKG2C ligand). In addition, they were poor Interferon-γ producers in response to Interleukin-12 and Interleukin-18. The impaired response to these cytokines, together with their highly differentiated profile, may reflect their skewing toward an adaptive condition specialized in controlling human cytomegalovirus. In conclusion, in pediatric patients receiving a type of allograft different from umbilical cord blood transplantation, human cytomegalovirus also induced memory-like natural killer cells, possibly contributing to controlling infections and reinforcing anti-leukemia effects.Introduction
Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphocytes that play an important role in anti-viral and anti-tumor responses.1 Their function is finely regulated by an array of both activating and inhibitory surface receptors42 and can be strongly influenced by several other factors, such as exposure to cytokines and/or PAMPs,5 developmental stage,6 and licensing.87 A fundamental role is played by HLA-class I specific inhibitory receptors including: killer Ig-like receptors (KIRs) distinguishing among allotypic determinants of the HLA-A, -B and -C;9 the HLA-E-specific CD94/NKG2A heterodimer10 and the leukocyte inhibitory receptor 1 (LIR-1 or ILT2) broadly recognizing HLA class I alleles.11 Activating KIRs, as well as CD94/NKG2C, represent the activating counterpart of HLA-I specific inhibitory receptors, although the ligand specificity is known only for selected receptors (i.e. KIR2DS1, KIR2DS4 and CD94/NKG2C).141210
Since NK cells are the first lymphocyte population to emerge after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), their role in early recovery of immunity after the allograft is considered crucial, contributing to protection from both tumor recurrence and viral infections before the full restoration of T cell immunity. In KIR/KIR-L mismatched haplo-HSCT recipients, alloreactive NK cells, generated 6–8 weeks after HSCT,15 are capable of killing residual tumor cells, thus critically improving patients outcome.1716 The first wave of NK cells after HSCT is represented by immature CD56 CD94/NKG2A NK cells, while more differentiated CD56 KIR NKG2A NK cells, containing alloreactive NK cells, only emerge later.191815 To reduce the time window required for fully competent NK cell generation, a new method of graft manipulation has been developed and applied; this approach is based on the elimination of αβ T cells (to prevent graft-versus-host disease, GvHD) and of B cells (to avoid EBV-related post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders). Notably, together with high numbers of CD34 HSC, this graft contains donor-derived, mature NK cells and γδ T cells20 which may confer prompt protection against both leukemia recurrence and infections.21
As recently shown, NK cell reconstitution after HSCT can be highly accelerated by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection/reactivation.2322 Indeed, in patients receiving umbilical cord blood transplantation (UCBT), HCMV infection induced a rapid development of mature NK cells characterized by the KIRNKG2A phenotype. Importantly, these cells expressed NKG2C. Although the exact mechanism(s) involved in HCMV-induced NKG2C NK cell expansion has not been clarified, it is likely that NKG2C may play a role in HCMV recognition and in promoting the expansion and/or maturation of NKG2C cells,24 as well as in the control of HCMV infection, as suggested in the case of a T cell deficient patient.25 In addition, a correlation between early HCMV reactivation and a reduced incidence of leukemia relapse has been reported in adult patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) receiving allo-HSCT.26
In the present study, we analyzed the impact of HCMV reactivation on the development of NK cells in a cohort of pediatric patients affected by hematological malignancies who received α/β T cell- and B cell-depleted HSCT. We observed a great expansion of memory-like NK cells in HCMV-reactivating/infected patients that express NKG2C, a putative receptor for HCMV and CD57, a marker of terminal differentiation.2827
Methods
Patients and samples
A cohort of 27 pediatric patients affected by hematological malignancies (mainly acute lymphoblastic leukemia, ALL) was enrolled in a phase I/II trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT01810120) and received HLA-haploidentical HSCT after removal of both αβT cells and CD19 B cells.20 Patients were transplanted between November 2010 and May 2012. Among them, 13 experienced HCMV infection after transplantation. Of these 13 patients, 12 had a positive HCMV serology, and 1 had a negative HCMV serology. However, for the sake of brevity, we consider all 13 patients together as the HCMV-reactivating group throughout this article. The clinical characteristics of patients and details on graft composition are summarized in the Online Supplementary Table S1. The assessment of HCMV serology, episodes of HCMV infection/reactivation and therapy are detailed in the Online Supplementary Methods and summarized in the Online Supplementary Table S2.
Peripheral blood samples were collected at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after transplantation. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were separated from blood samples by ficoll-hypaque gradients (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) and used directly for flow cytometry analyses and functional assays, or frozen and subsequently thawed for further investigations, whenever indicated. NK cell reconstitution was analyzed at the above time points, from month 1 to month 12 for 21 patients, and from month 1 to month 6 for 6 patients.
PBMC collected from adult healthy donors (HD) were used as controls. Frozen samples from HSC donors peripheral blood (PB) or leukapheresis were also analyzed.
To compare NK cell subsets differentiation, PBMC from 10 pediatric UCBT recipients and 5 pediatric recipients of positively selected CD34HSC from a HLA-haploidentical parent were also analyzed.
Patients were transplanted at the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital, Rome, Italy. Patients’ parents gave their informed consent to participation in this study, which was approved by the Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria San Martino (Genoa, Italy), by the University of Genoa (Genoa, Italy) and by the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital (Rome, Italy) ethics committees and was conducted in accordance with the tenants of the Declaration of Helsinki.
Monoclonal antibodies and flow cytometry, functional assays, KIR-ligands and KIR genes profile analyses and statistical analysis
See Online Supplementary Methods for details.
Results
HCMV reactivation/infection accelerates NK cell maturation in αβ+T/B cell-depleted HSCT pediatric patients
We analyzed NK cell reconstitution in 27 pediatric patients undergoing αβT/B cell-depleted HSCT and compared, at different time intervals post-HSCT, data in children who experienced HCMV reactivation (or primary infection in 1 case) (n=13) with those of children who did not (n=14). In all cases, reactivation/infection occurred within month 2 after HSCT and the virus was cleared by month 6.
The cells infused with this type of transplantation contain not only CD34 HSC, but also donor-derived NK and γδ T cells (see Online Supplementary Table S1 for details). Thus, at early time points after transplantation, peripheral blood NK cells contain mature NK cells together with HSC-derived NK cells. Although, due to technical limitation, the mature NK cells could not be distinguished from de novo generated NK cells, a remarkable difference could be detected between patients who either did or did not reactivate HCMV.
HCMV reactivation/infection accelerated the differentiation of mature NK cells, as shown by the higher frequency of KIRNKG2A NK cells by month 3 after HSCT in HCMV-reactivating patients (Figure 1A). Major differences emerged at 6 months after HSCT between HCMV-reactivating and non-reactivating patients (two representative patients are shown in Figure 1B). In line with previous studies,292322 HCMV reactivation induced a strong imprinting in NK cell development not only by accelerating KIRNKG2A NK cell differentiation, but also by inducing a remarkable increase of CD56 NKG2C NK cells (Figure 1C,D).
Notably, two patients in the HCMV-reactivating group did not expand NKG2C NK cells, while two others in the HCMV non-reactivating group developed high proportions of NKG2C NK cells and were also characterized by high percentages of NKG2AKIR NK cells (see dots in individual plots in Figure 1A,C).
In line with our previous study showing the emergence of high proportions of hypofunctional and phenotypically aberrant CD56CD16 NK cells in HCMV-reactivating adult recipients of UCBT,22 in our pediatric cohort we also found the presence of this peculiar NK cell subset in significantly higher frequencies in HCMV-reactivating patients than in non-reactivating ones (Figure 2A). However, the proportion of these cells at month 6 was significantly lower in the αβT/B cell-depleted cohort of HCMV-reactivating patients (Figure 2B and Online Supplementary Figure S1) than in the other two cohorts analyzed in parallel (namely, one undergoing UCBT and the other receiving only megadoses of positively selected CD34 cells from haploidentical donors).
High proportions of “memory-like” NKG2C+ CD57+ CD56dim NK cells develop in patients experiencing HCMV reactivation
In both solid organ transplanted patients and HSCT recipients, HCMV infection can induce the expansion of NKG2C CD57 NK cells.3023 This subset is present at variable proportions, also in HCMV-seropositive (HCMV) healthy individuals,31 and may possibly be endowed with “memory” properties. Thus, we analyzed the development of such NKG2C± CD57± NK cell subsets in our cohort of patients.
In Figure 3A, the distribution of different NKG2C/CD57 NK cell subsets (gated on CD56 NK cells) is reported at different time points after HSCT for patients who did or did not reactivate HCMV (the gating strategy is shown in Online Supplementary Figure S2A). By month 3, a substantial increase of NKG2CCD57 NK cells was detectable in HCMV-reactivating patients. More marked differences were found at month 6, when much higher proportions of NKG2CCD57 cells, paralleled by a sharp decrease of NKG2C CD57 NK cells, were detectable in HCMV-reactivating patients.
Figure 3B shows data from two representative patients, one reactivating and the other not reactivating HCMV. A progressive expansion of the NKG2CCD57 NK cell subset (gating on the CD56 subset) can be observed in the patient reactivating HCMV. Further analysis of PBNK cells from HCMV and HCMV healthy donors (HDs) (Figure 3C and Online Supplementary Figure S2B) showed that the NKG2CCD57 NK cell subset was present in significantly lower frequencies in HCMV HDs than in HCMV-reactivating HSCT patients, both at month 6 and 12 (Online Supplementary Figure S2C).
When PBNK cells from the various HSC donors of HCMV-reactivating patients were analyzed, we found that NKG2CCD57 NK cells were present at a low median frequency (11%, Online Supplementary Figure S2D) although all the HSC donors analyzed were HCMV+ (Online Supplementary Table S1). Thus, 3–6 months after HSCT, in most HCMV-reactivating patients, the frequency of NKG2CCD57 NK cells exceeded that measured in their respective donors (Figure 3B, Online Supplementary Figure S2D and data not shown). In view of this observation, we can suggest that NKG2CCD57 NK cells emerging in HCMV-reactivating patients are mostly de novo generated.
Memory-like NK cells from recipients of αβ+T/B cell-depleted HSCT are characterized by the KIR+ NKG2A-Siglec7− LIR1+/− IL-18Ralow NCRlow surface phenotype
We analyzed in more detail the phenotype of the HCMV-induced NKG2CCD57 CD56 NK cell subset, focusing on HCMV-reactivating patients at month 6 after HSCT, i.e. when these cells were maximally expanded. HCMV HDs were analyzed for comparison. Representative dot plots indicating the gating strategy are shown in Figure 4A.
Both NKG2CCD57 and NKG2CCD57 NK cells were mostly KIRNKG2A in both transplanted patients and HCMV HDs (Figure 4B). Notably, expanded NKG2C KIR NK cells preferentially expressed KIRs specific for the respective donor KIR ligands (Online Supplementary Figure S3 and data not shown). As previously reported in UCBT patients, Siglec-7 was significantly down-regulated in NKG2C NK cells isolated from patients, but only marginally in NK cells from HCMV HDs (Figure 4B).22 Importantly, Siglec-7 down-regulation was correlated with HCMV recurrence. Indeed, non-reactivating patients did not significantly down-regulate this marker at any time points after HSCT (Online Supplementary Figure S4), with the exception of the two outliers mentioned before.
The analysis of LIR-1 in our cohort of patients revealed a more frequent expression in NKG2CCD57 than in NKG2CCD57 NK cells. This different expression was more evident in HCMV HDs, where most NKG2CCD57 NK cells were LIR-1 (Figure 4B), in line with previous studies.31
The NKG2CCD57 and NKG2CCD57 NK cells subsets of both HSCT recipients and HDs displayed remarkable differences in the expression levels of IL-18Rα (Figure 4C). This is in line with previous reports that terminally differentiated CD57 NK cells express low levels of different cytokine receptors.2827 Interestingly, both the proportion of IL-18Rα (data not shown) and the median surface intensity (Figure 4C) were lower in patients than in HDs in all CD56 NK cell subsets. Figure 4C also shows that NKG2CCD57 (both in patients and HDs) display lower expression of NKp46 and NKp30 as compared to NKG2C CD57 NK cells. No significant differences were detected for other triggering receptors including CD16, DNAM1, NKG2D and 2B4 (Figure 4C and Online Supplementary Figure S5).
Memory-like NKG2C+CD57+ NK cells respond efficiently to tumor cells and HLA-E+ targets, but show impaired IFN-γ production in response to rhIL-12 plus rhIL-18 stimulation
We next evaluated the functional capabilities of the expanded NKG2CCD57 memory-like NK cell subset (in comparison with the other subsets identified by the expression of NKG2C/CD57) by assessing degranulation and IFN-γ production upon K562 stimulation and/or exposure to cytokines. Figure 5A (left panel) shows that the different NK subsets (analyzed by gating on CD56 NK cells) displayed comparable levels of CD107a degranulation, further increased by overnight exposure to rhIL-15. Figure 5A (right panel) shows that, in the absence of exogenous rhIL-15, PBNK cells from HCMV+ HDs displayed slightly higher degranulation as compared to patients.
Regarding the production of IFN-γ, upon stimulation with K562, both the NKG2CCD57 and NKG2CCD57 NK cell subsets (both in patients and HDs) were slightly better producers than NKG2C NK cell subsets. Also, IFN-γ production was increased upon overnight exposure to rhIL-15 (Figure 5B).
In parallel experiments, the ability of the various NKG2C/CD57 subsets to produce IFN-γ was assessed after overnight incubation in the presence of rhIL-12 plus rhIL-18. Remarkably, under these conditions, NKG2CCD57 memory-like NK cells from patients resulted as poor IFN-γ producers (Figure 5B), while the less differentiated NKG2CCD57 NK cells were the best producers. Intermediate levels of IFN-γ were produced by the NKG2CCD57 and NKG2CCD57 NK subsets. These differences in response to rhIL-12 plus rhIL-18 might reflect, at least in part, the levels of expression of IL-18Rα (Figure 4C) in the different NKG2C/CD57 subsets. It is of note, in this context, that all the NK subsets analyzed expressed IL-12R at similar levels (data not shown). A lower production of IFN-γ, in response to rhIL-12 plus rhIL-18, was also detected in NKG2CCD57 NK cells from HDs. However, down-regulation of IL-18Rα expression was less marked and IFN-γ production was only partially compromised. At variance with IFN-γ production, exposure to rhIL-12 plus rhIL-18 induced comparable levels of degranulation in the different NKG2C/CD57 NK cell subsets after stimulation with K562 (Online Supplementary Figure S6).
In another set of experiments, NKG2C NK cells from HCMV-reactivating patients were assessed for degranulation in reverse ADCC assays, either in the presence or in the absence of specific anti-NKG2C mAb. Antibody-mediated triggering of NKG2C efficiently induced degranulation in both NKG2CCD57 and NKG2CCD57 NK cell subsets at levels comparable to those induced by anti- CD16 mAbs (Figure 6A). The simultaneous mAb-mediated triggering of NKG2C and LIR-1 did not affect degranulation induced by anti-NKG2C mAb alone (data not shown). On the contrary, the simultaneous mAb-mediated triggering of NKG2C and KIR almost completely abolished NKG2C-triggered degranulation (Figure 6A). Similar results were obtained in the analysis of HCMV HD NK cells (Online Supplementary Figure S7).
Next, we examined the ability of NKG2C NK cell subsets (either CD57 or CD57) to recognize HLA-E, a specific ligand of NKG2C,10 by assessing their degranulation, in CD107a assays, in the presence of the HLA-E expressing (transfected) 721.221 cell line (221.AEH).32 As shown in Figure 6B, both NKG2CCD57 and NKG2CCD57 NK cell subsets displayed enhanced degranulation as compared to 221wt (i.e. lacking HLA-E surface expression, Online Supplementary Figure S8A), indicating that NKG2C recognizes HLA-E on target cells and induces activation/degranulation of NKG2C cells. This finding was further substantiated by masking experiments performed using a specific anti-NKG2C mAb. In the presence of this mAb, degranulation of NKG2C NK cells in response to 221.AEH was inhibited (data not shown). On the contrary, NKG2C CD57 and NKG2CCD57 NK cells that express high levels of NKG2A (Figure 4B), displayed decreased degranulation against 221.AEH than 221wt, in line with the inhibitory effect mediated by NKG2A upon interaction with HLA-E.
Similar results were obtained in parallel experiments with HCMV HDs. However, in this case, NKG2C NK cells displayed a lesser increase in degranulation when comparing 221wt to 221.AEH (Online Supplementary Figure S8B). This is likely due to the higher levels of NKG2A expressed on the surface of NKG2C NK cells from HDs (Figure 4B). In line with this possibility, when degranulation was evaluated after gating on NK cells lacking NKG2A (Online Supplementary Figure S8C), the increment became significant also in HDs (Online Supplementary Figure S8D).
Discussion
NK cells play a crucial role in early immunity following HSCT in leukemic patients;33 therefore the possibility to improve and to control NK cell maturation and function in HSCT recipients may result in important clinical benefits.
We have recently documented that in UCBT recipients HCMV infection/reactivation early after HSCT results in a remarkable acceleration of NK cell reconstitution and maturation.22 In agreement with this study, we also found that in pediatric patients receiving a different cell composition in the HLA-haploidentical HSCT setting, depleted of TCR-αβT and CD19 B cells, HCMV reactivation could accelerate the development of mature NK cells characterized by the KIRNKG2ANKG2CSiglec7 phenotypic signature. This is noteworthy, as compared to pediatric patients receiving either UCBT or positively-selected CD34 HSC from a HLA-haploidentical relative, this cohort of patients had reduced proportions of hypofunctional CD56CD16 NK cells. Since these cells usually develop in subjects infected by HCMV when T cell immunity is impaired,3422 their reduced presence suggests that NK and γδ T cells contained in the graft may exert a protective role against severe infections.
It is well documented that HCMV infection influences NK cell maturation and induces a long-term reconfiguration of the NK cell receptor repertoire.3735 This imprinting, induced by HCMV infection, also suggested that NK cells might keep the memory of past infections, thus sharing features with the cells of the adaptive immune system. Indeed, in mice, the expansion and persistence of memory Ly49H NK cells, endowed with specific anti-MCMV properties, has been clearly documented.38 It is possible that NKG2C NK cells that expand in humans after HCMV infection and preferentially acquire CD57 may represent the human counterpart of murine memory Ly49H NK cells.
In the present study, we show that most pediatric patients reactivating HCMV display a progressive expansion of this putative memory NK cell population expressing both NKG2C and CD57. The frequency of NKG2C NK cells (both CD57 and CD57) at 6 and 12 months after HSCT was higher than in both adult HCMV-seropositive HDs and in the respective HSC donors (Online Supplementary Figure S2, Figure 3B). This may reflect a recent or ongoing HCMV infection occurring in patients, but could also depend on the status of immunosuppression allowing a better imprinting of NK cells.375 Notably, we found a correlation between the duration of the antiviral treatment (Online Supplementary Table S2) and the percentage of Siglec-7 negative NK cells, which was only a tendency at month 3 (Spearman r=0,47 P=0,14) and became significant at month 6 (Spearman r=0,6 P=0,04), possibly indicating that the loss of Siglec-7 might be a marker of an efficient anti-HCMV response.
The phenotypic characterization of NK cells developing in our patients reactivating HCMV revealed that NKG2CCD57 NK cells represent a highly differentiated subset, displaying lower levels of expression of Siglec-7, IL-18Rα, NKG2A, NKp46 and NKp30 and higher levels of KIRs and LIR-1 than NKG2CCD57 NK cells. It is likely that NKG2CCD57 NK cells first emerge in response to HCMV infection and rapidly shift to a more differentiated CD57LIR-1 phenotype. It cannot be ruled out that LIR-1 expression may be progressively acquired by NKG2C NK cells following HCMV infection, and represent a viral evasion strategy. Indeed, the HCMV-derived viral glycoprotein UL-18 is a high affinity ligand for LIR-1.39 Although in reverse ADCC experiments LIR-1 did not substantially inhibit NKG2C activation, it is possible that, in vivo, UL-18 expressed by infected cells may efficiently engage LIR-1 and weaken NKG2C-mediated signaling.
Whether the NKG2CCD57 NK cell subset can persist for a long time after resolution of infection, or is continuously replenished by differentiating NKG2CCD57 NK cells4036 is still unknown. In support of the first hypothesis is the finding that HCMV infection can induce resistance to cell death in NK cells developing after UCBT.41 In some patients, we could observe an increase in NK cell numbers after HCMV infection (Online Supplementary Table S3) that was followed by the acquisition of a memory-like phenotype, suggesting that both proliferation and differentiation are likely contributing to the generation of this subset.
In our cohort of patients, the expanded memory-like NKG2CCD57 NK cells were functionally competent in terms of cytokine production and cytotoxicity/degranulation in response to tumor targets. On the other hand, they displayed poor capabilities of producing IFN-γ in response to rhIL-12 plus rhIL-18. This may be consequent, at least in part, to the reduced expression of IL-18Rα. However, we cannot exclude the involvement of other mechanisms affecting the signaling pathway downstream of the receptors. The diminished responsiveness to cytokines of NKG2CCD57 NK cells may reflect their specialization in controlling HCMV infection and their memory-like signature, in agreement with recent findings in mice.42 Indeed, in mice, MCMV-induced memory Ly49H NK cells show an impaired response to cytokines alone (IL-12 and IL-18). Whether this poor response was determined by the reduced expression of cytokine receptors, or by an altered signaling downstream of the receptors, has not been established. On the other hand, these MCMV-induced memory Ly49H NK cells were characterized by a higher responsiveness to m157 antigen (the specific viral ligand for Ly49H) in the presence of cytokines, as compared to naive Ly49H NK cells.42 In this context, we also show that cytokine-treated NKG2C CD57 NK cells can efficiently degranulate in response to HLA-E targets (HLA-E is a ligand of NKG2C) (Figure 6).10 It is of note that differently to mice, the putative viral ligands recognized by NKG2C, expressed by HCMV-infected cells, have not been identified. They may be HLA-E molecules bound to viral peptides (e.g. UL40-derived peptides),4337 as well as other undefined molecules.
Interestingly, two patients receiving grafts from HCMV-seropositive donors containing donor-derived NKG2C NK cells did not experience HCMV reactivation after transplantation, but displayed a significant expansion of highly differentiated NKG2C NK cells. These data suggest that donor-derived transplanted NK cells may persist in the recipient and favor anti-viral responses. Since these patients received grafts from seropositive donors, it is likely that transplanted NKG2C NK cells, primed by a previous encounter with HCMV in the donor, had undergone expansion in response to viral antigens present in low levels in infected peripheral tissues of the recipient (subclinical HCMV reactivation). This would be in line with previous data in recipients receiving T cell-replete HSCT.4544 Interestingly, one of these two patients (pt #26) expanding NKG2C NK cells, experienced infection with viruses other than HCMV, namely adenovirus and BK, early after HSCT (Online Supplementary Table S1). Thus, it cannot be ruled out that these viral infections could have favored the expansion of HCMV-primed, donor-derived NKG2C NK cells, in agreement with a previous study showing that hantavirus infection could induce the expansion of NKG2C NK cells in HCMV individuals.46
The response to HCMV may also be influenced by the number of donor-derived mature NK cells contained in the graft, which is highly variable among patients receiving this type of HSCT (Online Supplementary Table S1). It is possible that protection from HCMV reactivation is achieved only with suitable numbers of NKG2CKIR NK cells in the graft. Notably, the two patients displaying high frequencies of NKG2C NK cells and the absence of HCMV reactivation received grafts containing high numbers of donor-derived NK cells (pts #26 and #27, Online Supplementary Table S1).
Thus, in HCMV-reactivating patients, as well as in the few non-reactivating ones who were transplanted with seropositive donors, the proportions of mature NKG2CCD57 NK cells were significantly higher than those of non-reactivating patients. The capability of killing patient leukemia blasts and of protecting patients from acute HCMV infection, and also from other viral infections, should be investigated in assays against autologous leukemia blasts and autologous infected targets. However, it is conceivable that these cells, which respond efficiently against tumors and HLA-E targets, may play a beneficial role. Indeed AML blasts (and to a lesser extent ALL blasts) express HLA-E at significant levels4847 and could be directly targeted by NKG2CNK cells (especially when a KIR/KIR-L mismatch occurs in the graft-versus-host direction). Along this line, a protective role for NKG2CCD57 CD56 NK cells emerging after HSCT in HCMV-reactivating recipients has been suggested recently, although in a different transplantation setting.49
Interestingly, it has recently been shown that NKG2CCD57 NK cells, isolated from HCMV individuals, are characterized by an epigenetic remodeling at the IFN-γ locus, which is similar to the one found in memory CD8 T cells or Th1 cells. This epigenetic imprinting could be responsible for the enhanced IFN-γ production observed in NKG2C NK cells, and may be involved in the regulation of NK cell adaptive immune system mechanisms.40 Moreover, very recently, an altered pattern of expression of signalling proteins has been described in HCMV-induced memory-like NK cells.50 In particular, HCMV infection could promote the generation of adaptive NK cells that lack the expression of FcεRγ, EAT-2 and SyK. These molecular characteristics depend on given DNA methylation patterns that memory NK cells share in part with CTLs. Such epigenetic alterations could be responsible for the functional skewing shown by HCMV-induced NK cells that appear to be specialized in target cell recognition, especially via ADCC mechanisms, and impaired in cytokine-induced responses (with IL-12 and IL-18 at least). Indeed, previous studies showed that memory-like NKG2CCD57NK cells, isolated from HCMV HDs, can efficiently kill HCMV-infected targets in the presence of anti-HCMV antibodies, i.e. through CD16 cross-linking.5131 Notably, in HSCT recipients, memory-like NKG2CCD57 NK cells displayed efficient mAb-mediated CD16 triggering (Figure 6A) and could kill infected cells via ADCC.
The precise definition of the signals capable of inducing this selective imprinting confined to NKG2C NK cells would be important for providing a molecular basis for the regulation and, possibly, the manipulation of adaptive features in innate cells.
A larger cohort of patients should be investigated in future studies to definitively establish whether HCMV reactivation actually confers beneficial effects against infections and leukemia relapses, as suggested by other studies.4926
In conclusion, we show that HCMV reactivation in pediatric patients receiving a novel type of haplo-HSCT (αβ+T/B cell-depleted), deeply influence NK cell maturation and induce the emergence of memory-like NK cells. Learning to harness the recently unraveled adaptive features of NK cells may be revealed as being useful in order to achieve better immune recovery in HSCT recipients.
Acknowledgements
Investigator Grants n. 15704 (A.M.), 15283 (L.M.), 15925 (A.B.) and Special Project 5×1000 n. 9962 (A.M., L.M. and F.L.) from Associazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro; PRIN 2010 (Progetto di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale to F.L., A.M.) and RF-2010-2316606 (L.M., F.L., D.P.) from The Ministry of Health; progetto Cordon de Vie (F.L.) and Progetto Ricerca Ateneo 2013 (M.D.C.).
Footnotes
- ↵* These authors contributed equally to this study
- Check the online version for the most updated information on this article, online supplements, and information on authorship & disclosures: www.haematologica.org/content/101/3/371
- Received July 22, 2015.
- Accepted December 4, 2015.
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