AI Article Synopsis

  • Natural killer (NK) cells play a key role in fighting malaria through a mechanism called antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), but how different factors influence NK cell activation is not fully understood.
  • A study compared NK cells from people exposed to malaria in Uganda with those who had never been exposed, finding that malaria-exposed individuals had stronger ADCC but weaker inflammatory responses, as evidenced by changes in NK cell surface markers.
  • The effectiveness of NK cell degranulation varied based on the type of erythrocytes and plasma used, with the best responses seen using certain sickle cell erythrocytes and plasma from high-transmission areas, while responses to clinical parasite strains were less effective compared to standard laboratory strains.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Natural killer (NK) cells make important contributions to anti-malarial immunity through antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), but the role of different components of this pathway in promoting NK cell activation remains unclear.

Methods: We compared the functions and phenotypes of NK cells from malaria-exposed and malaria-naive donors, and then varied the erythrocyte genetic background, strain and opsonising plasma used in ADCC to observe their impacts on NK cell degranulation as measured by CD107a mobilisation.

Results: Natural killer cells from malaria-exposed adult Ugandan donors had enhanced ADCC, but an impaired pro-inflammatory response to cytokine stimulation, compared to NK cells obtained from malaria-naive adult North American donors. Cellular phenotypes from malaria-exposed donors reflected this specialisation for ADCC, with a compartment-wide downregulation of the Fc receptor γ-chain and enrichment of highly differentiated CD56 and CD56 populations. NK cell degranulation was enhanced in response to opsonised schizonts cultured in sickle cell heterozygous erythrocytes relative to wild-type erythrocytes, and when using opsonising plasma collected from donors living in a high transmission area compared to a lower transmission area despite similar levels of 3D7 schizont-specific IgG levels. However, degranulation was lowered in response to opsonised field isolate schizonts isolated from clinical malaria infections, compared to the 3D7 laboratory strain typically used in these assays.

Conclusion: This work highlights important host and parasite factors that contribute to ADCC efficacy that should be considered in the design of ADCC assays.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11528551PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cti2.70005DOI Listing

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