Publications
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2002
NK cells have the ability to recognize and kill MHC-mismatched hemopoietic cells. In the present study, strain-specific differences in the rat NK allorecognition repertoire were exploited to generate Abs against receptors that may be involved in allogeneic responses. A mAb termed STOK9 was selected, and it reacted with subsets of NK cells and NKR-P1(+) T cells from certain rat strains possessing highly alloreactive NK cells. The STOK9(+) NK subset was broadly alloreactive and lysed Con A lymphoblast targets from a range of MHC-mismatched strains. The mAb STOK9 precipitated a 75-kDa dimeric glycoprotein from NK lysates. Expression cloning revealed that each monomer consisted of 231 aa with limited homology to other previously characterized killer cell lectin-like receptors (KLRs). This glycoprotein therefore constitutes a novel KLR branch, and it has been termed KLRH1. A gene in the central region of the natural killer gene complex on rat chromosome 4 encodes KLRH1. A mouse homolog appears to be present as deduced from analyses of genomic trace sequences. The function of KLRH1 is unknown, but it contains an immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif, suggesting an inhibitory function. The MHC haplotype of the host appears to influence KLRH1 expression, suggesting that it may function as an MHC-binding receptor on subsets of NK cells and T lymphocytes.
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2002
2002
The requirement for cytotoxic T lymphocytes during allograft rejection is controversial. We have demonstrated that CD8+ T cells are not essential for allograft rejection or for the induction of apoptosis in two experimental models of transplantation. To determine candidate cells types which may play a role in the events leading to graft rejection, the cellular composition of rejecting allografts was determined. We demonstrate that substantial numbers of NK cells, of recipient origin, infiltrate allografts as early as 12 h after transplantation. These NK cells produce cytokines and express cytotoxic mediators such as granzyme B and FasL. It is unknown which NK cell receptors are expressed and activated during transplantation. NK cells express multiple cell surface receptors, including MHC class I binding inhibitory receptors, which deliver a negative signal, and activation receptors, which stimulate cytokine secretion and cytotoxicity of NK cells. To begin to understand NK cell activation in the context of transplantation, we have recently cloned a novel rat immunoglobulin-like surface receptor from a rejecting liver allograft. Sequence analysis demonstrates that this putative activation receptor contains 71% identity to human NKp30 at the DNA level, suggesting that it is the rat homologue (rNKp30). Characterization of NK activation receptors may lead to better understanding of the interactions between the innate and adaptive immune responses in transplantation.
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2002
The translocation of proteins across the bacterial cell membrane is carried out by highly conserved components of the Sec system. Most bacterial species have a single copy of the genes encoding SecA and SecY, which are essential for viability. However, Streptococcus gordonii strain M99 encodes SecA and SecY homologues that are not required for viability or for the translocation of most exported proteins. The genes (secA2 and secY2) reside in a region of the chromosome required for the export of GspB, a 286 kDa cell wall-anchored protein. Loss of GspB surface expression is associated with a significant reduction in the binding of M99 to human platelets, suggesting that it may be an adhesin. Genetic analyses indicate that M99 has a second, canonical SecA homologue that is essential for viability. At least two other Gram-positive species, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus, encode two sets of SecA and SecY homologues. One set is more similar to SecA and SecY of Escherichia coli, whereas the other set is more similar to SecA2 and SecY2 of strain M99. The conserved organization of genes in the secY2-secA2 loci suggests that, in each of these Gram-positive species, SecA2 and SecY2 may constitute a specialized system for the transport of a very large serine-rich repeat protein.
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