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IFN increases class I MHC antigen expression on adenovirus-infected human cells without inducing resistance to natural killer cell killing.

J M Routes
J Immunol October 1, 1992, 149 (7) 2372-2377;
J M Routes
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Abstract

It has been previously shown that unstimulated NK cells cannot preferentially lyse adenovirus serotypes 2 and 5-infected human cells. In this study, the ability of IFN to promote the selective NK cell-mediated lysis of adenovirus-infected human cells was determined. The relationship between target cell susceptibility to NK cell-mediated killing and class I Ag expression was also analyzed through the use of adenovirus serotype 2 and 5 mutants that do not make the adenovirus early region 3 19-kDa class I binding protein. IFN induced the selective lysis of adenovirus serotype 2 and 5-infected human cells by activating NK cells (IFN-alpha) and protecting uninfected, but not adenovirus-infected cells, from NK cell-mediated lysis (IFN-gamma). IFN-gamma increased the expression of class I Ag on the surface of cells infected with the adenovirus early region 3 deletion mutants, dl327 or dl801, to a level equal to or greater than that expressed on uninfected cells. Despite the increased expression of class I Ag, IFN-gamma could not protect these adenovirus-infected cells from NK cell-mediated lysis. Thus, dl327 or dl801 infection prevented IFN-gamma's induction of cytolytic resistance to NK cell-mediated killing but left IFN-gamma's induction of class I Ag intact. Surface class I Ag levels were substantially higher on IFN-gamma-treated, dl327-, and dl801-infected cells in comparison to cells infected with wild type adenovirus serotype 5. Again, higher target cell levels of class I Ag did not correlate with increased resistance to NK cell-mediated lysis because there was equivalent NK cell-mediated killing of IFN-gamma-treated adenovirus serotype 5-, dl327-, or dl801-infected cells. Thus, IFN-gamma only protects uninfected cells from NK cell-mediated killing, irrespective of target class I Ag levels, and thereby concentrates NK lytic activity on just adenovirus-infected cells. These data demonstrate that IFN-gamma's ability to protect target cells from NK cell-mediated cytolysis is unrelated to IFN-gamma's induction of surface class I MHC Ag.

  • Copyright © 1992 by American Association of Immunologists
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The Journal of Immunology
Vol. 149, Issue 7
1 Oct 1992
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IFN increases class I MHC antigen expression on adenovirus-infected human cells without inducing resistance to natural killer cell killing.
J M Routes
The Journal of Immunology October 1, 1992, 149 (7) 2372-2377;

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IFN increases class I MHC antigen expression on adenovirus-infected human cells without inducing resistance to natural killer cell killing.
J M Routes
The Journal of Immunology October 1, 1992, 149 (7) 2372-2377;
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Print ISSN 0022-1767        Online ISSN 1550-6606