Can selective MHC downregulation explain the specificity and genetic diversity of NK cell receptors?
Authored by Paola Carrillo-Bustamante, Can Kesmir, Boer Rob J de
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00311
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells express inhibiting receptors (iNKRs), which
specifically bind MHC-I molecules on the surface of healthy cells. When
the expression of MHC-I on the cell surface decreases, which might occur
during certain viral infections and cancer, iNKRs lose inhibiting
signals and the infected cells become target for NK cell activation
(missing-self detection). Although the detection of MHC-I deficient
cells can be achieved by conserved receptor-ligand interactions, several
iNKRs are encoded by gene families with a remarkable genetic diversity, containing many haplotypes varying in gene content and allelic
polymorphism. So far, the biological function of this expansion within
the NKR cluster has remained poorly understood. Here, we investigate
whether the evolution of diverse iNKRs genes can be driven by a specific
viral immunoevasive mechanism: selective MHC downregulation. Several
viruses, including EBV, CMV, and HIV, decrease the expression of MHC-I
to escape from T cell responses. This downregulation does not always
affect all MHC loci in the same way, as viruses target particular MHC
molecules. To study the selection pressure of selective MHC
downregulation on iNKRs, we have developed an agent-based model
simulating an evolutionary scenario of hosts infected with herpes-like
viruses, which are able to selectively downregulate the expression of
MHC-I molecules on the cell surface. We show that iNKRs evolve
specificity and, depending on the similarity of MHC alleles within each
locus and the differences between the loci, they can specialize to a
particular MHC-I locus. The easier it is to classify an MHC allele to
its locus, the lower the required diversity of the NKRs. Thus, the
diversification of the iNKR cluster depends on the locus specific MHC
structure.
Tags
T-lymphocytes
Natural-killer-cells
Recognition
Class-i molecules
Complex class-i
Hla-e
Inhibitory receptor
Mediated lysis
Missing self
Bw4
epitope