Caspase-8 restricts natural killer cell accumulation during MCMV Infection.

Med Microbiol Immunol

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Emory Vaccine Center, Emory University School of Medicine, 1462 Clifton Rd. N.E, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA.

Published: August 2019

Natural killer (NK) cells provide important host defense against herpesvirus infections and influence subsequent T cell control of replication and maintenance of latency. NK cells exhibit phases of expansion, contraction and memory formation in response to the natural mouse pathogen murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV). Innate and adaptive immune responses are tightly regulated in mammals to avoid excess tissue damage while preventing acute and chronic viral disease and assuring resistance to reinfection. Caspase (CASP)8 is an autoactivating aspartate-specific cysteine protease that initiates extrinsic apoptosis and prevents receptor interacting protein (RIP) kinase (RIPK)1-RIPK3-driven necroptosis. CASP8 also promotes death-independent signal transduction. All of these activities make contributions to inflammation. Here, we demonstrate that CASP8 restricts NK cell expansion during MCMV infection but does not influence NK memory. Casp8Ripk3 mice mount higher NK response levels than Casp8Ripk3 littermate controls or WT C57BL/6 J mice, indicating that RIPK3 deficiency alone does not contribute to NK response patterns. MCMV m157-responsive Ly49H NK cells support increased expansion of both Ly49H NK cells and CD8 T cells in Casp8Ripk3 mice. Surprisingly, hyperaccumulation of NK cells depends on the pronecrotic kinase RIPK1. Ripk1Casp8Ripk3 mice fail to show the enhanced expansion of lymphocytes observed in Casp8Ripk3 mice even though development and homeostasis are preserved in uninfected Ripk1Casp8Ripk3 mice. Thus, CASP8 naturally regulates the magnitude of NK cell responses in response to infection where strong activation signals depend on another key regulator of death signaling, RIPK1. In addition, the strong NK cell response promotes survival of effector CD8 T cells during their expansion. Thus, hyperaccumulation of NK cells and crosstalk with T cells becomes amplified in the absence of extrinsic cell death machinery.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6635065PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00430-019-00617-6DOI Listing

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