Volume 81A, Issue 4 pp. 294-302
Original Article
Free Access

Cytotoxic functions and susceptibility to apoptosis of human CD56bright NK cells differentiated in vitro from CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors

Loris Zamai

Corresponding Author

Loris Zamai

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino, Italy

INFN-Gran Sasso National Laboratory, Assergi, L'Aquila, Italy

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, via Ca' le Suore 2, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino 61029, ItalySearch for more papers by this author
Genny Del Zotto

Genny Del Zotto

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino, Italy

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Flavia Buccella

Flavia Buccella

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino, Italy

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Laura Galeotti

Laura Galeotti

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino, Italy

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Barbara Canonico

Barbara Canonico

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino, Italy

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Francesca Luchetti

Francesca Luchetti

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino, Italy

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Stefano Papa

Stefano Papa

Department of Earth, Life and Environment Sciences, University of Urbino “Carlo Bo,” Urbino, Italy

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First published: 08 February 2012
Citations: 15

Abstract

Cytotoxic functions and susceptibility to apoptosis are crucial aspects of NK cells suitable to counter cancer after infusion in oncologic patients. To test the feasibility and the usefulness of infusing in vitro generated NK cells, these two features were investigated in NK cells developed in vitro from CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors. Purified CD34+ cells were cultured for 15–30 days with FLT-3 ligand (FLT3-L) and IL-15 with or without IL-21. To induce terminal differentiation, NK cells were cultured for further 15 days with IL-15, IL-21, or their combination. A CD56dim/CD16+ NK subset, expressing high level of perforin, granzymes, and LFA-1, appeared early in cultures with FLT3-L, IL-15, and IL-21, but it quickly died, indicating its predisposition to apoptosis. On the contrary, CD56bright NK cells generated after 30 days of culture with FLT3-L plus IL-15 did not show a considerable apoptosis, nevertheless only a subset of these cells expressed granzyme-B, perforin, LFA-1, and CD94-CD159a heterodimer, indicating a functional immaturity. Interestingly, further 15 days of culture with IL-21 plus IL-15 did not induce the generation of CD56dim cells from the CD56bright subset and actually inhibited IL-15-induced maturation/activation of this latter subset. In fact, IL-15 alone upregulated granzyme-B, TRAIL, Fas ligand, CD94-CD159a, LFA-1, CD16, KIRs, and TRAIL-R2 on CD56bright NK cells. Our results suggest that during differentiation CD56bright NK cells, similarly to mature activated NK cells, become highly cytotoxic and are relatively resistant to apoptosis induced by TNF family members. © 2012 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.

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