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  5. A subset of natural killer cells achieves self-tolerance without expressing inhibitory receptors specific for self-MHC molecules

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Article
en
2005

A subset of natural killer cells achieves self-tolerance without expressing inhibitory receptors specific for self-MHC molecules

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en
2005
Vol 105 (11)
Vol. 105
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2004-08-3156

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David H Raulet
David H Raulet

University of California, Berkeley

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Nadine Fernandez
Emmanuel Treiner
Russell E. Vance
+3 more

Abstract

Abstract It is widely believed that self-tolerance of natural killer (NK) cells occurs because each NK cell expresses at least one inhibitory receptor specific for a host major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecule. Here we report that some NK cells lack all known self-MHC–specific inhibitory receptors, yet are nevertheless self-tolerant. These NK cells exhibit a normal cell surface phenotype and some functional activity. However, they respond poorly to class I–deficient normal cells, tumor cells, or cross-linking of stimulatory receptors, suggesting that self-tolerance is established by dampening stimulatory signaling. Thus, self-tolerance of NK cells in normal animals can occur independently of MHC-mediated inhibition, and hyporesponsiveness plays a role in self-tolerance of NK cells, as also proposed for B and T cells.

How to cite this publication

Nadine Fernandez, Emmanuel Treiner, Russell E. Vance, A. M. Jamieson, Suzanne Lemieux, David H Raulet (2005). A subset of natural killer cells achieves self-tolerance without expressing inhibitory receptors specific for self-MHC molecules. , 105(11), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2004-08-3156.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2005

Authors

6

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2004-08-3156

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