Contact-dependent Stimulation and Inhibition of Dendritic Cells by Natural Killer Cells
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Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells and dendritic cells (DCs) are two distinct cell types of innate immunity. It is known that the in vitro interaction of human NK cells with autologous DCs results in DC lysis. Here we show that contact-dependent interactions between activated human NK cells and immature DCs (iDCs) provides a "control switch" for the immune system. At low NK/DC ratios, this interaction dramatically amplifies DC responses, whereas at high ratios it completely turns off their responses. Specifically, culture of activated human NK cells with iDCs, at low NK/DC ratios (1:5), led to exponential increases in DC cytokine production, which were completely dependent on cell-to-cell contact. DC maturation was…
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689
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4Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Interleukin 12
- Cell biology
- Innate immune system
- Lymphokine-activated killer cell
- Biology
- Dendritic cell
- Interleukin 21
- Stimulation
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