What is it about?

NKG2D is a potent activating receptor that is expressed on cytotoxic immune cells such as CD8 T and NK cells, where it promotes cytotoxicity after binding stress ligands on infected or transformed cells. On NK cell precursors NKG2D modulates proliferation and maturation. Previously, we observed that NKG2D deficiency affects peripheral B cell numbers. In this study, we show that NKG2D regulates B1a cell development and function. We find that mice deficient for NKG2D have a strong reduction of B1a cell numbers. As a result, NKG2D-deficient mice produce significantly less Ag-specific IgM Abs upon immunization with T cell-independent Ags, and they are more susceptible to Gram-negative sepsis. Klrk1-/- B1a cells are also functionally impaired and they fail to provide protection against Francisella novicida upon adoptive transfer. Using mixed bone marrow chimeric mice, we show that the impact of NKG2D deficiency on B1a cell development is cell intrinsic. No changes in homeostatic turnover and homing of B cells were detectable, limiting the effects of NKG2D to modulation of the hematopoietic development of B1a cells. Using conditional ablation, we demonstrate that the effect of NKG2D on B1a cell development occurs at a developmental stage that precedes the common lymphoid progenitor. Our findings reveal an unexpected new role for NKG2D in the regulation of B1a cell development. The protective effects of this activating receptor therefore reach beyond that of cytotoxic cells, stimulating the immune system to fight bacterial infections by promoting development of innate-like B cells.

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Why is it important?

NKG2D is an activating receptor expressed on virtually all NK cells and subsets of T cells. In our paper it is for the first time showed that it is also important for the development and function of innate-like B1a cells. The results support separate development of B1a cells from B1b and B2 cells. They suggest existence of a common NK-B1a precursor.

Perspectives

NKG2D is a sensor for cells exposed to different types of cellular stress like DNA damage, viral and bacterial infection, etc. We have shown previously that it plays an important role in NK cell-development (Zafirova et al. 2009, Immunity). It seems that enviromental conditions during the embryonic development and later shape our innate immune system (i.e. NK and B1a cells) via NKG2D receptor.

Dr Bojan Polic
Faculty of Medicine University of Rijeka

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This page is a summary of: NKG2D Promotes B1a Cell Development and Protection against Bacterial Infection, The Journal of Immunology, January 2017, The American Association of Immunologists,
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1600461.
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