HIV infection is associated with a preferential decline in less-differentiated CD56dim CD16+ NK cells

  • Henoch S Hong
  • Johanna M Eberhard
  • Phillip Keudel
  • Benjamin A Bollmann
  • Matthias Ballmaier
  • Nupur Bhatnagar
  • Margot Zielinska-Skowronek
  • Reinhold E Schmidt
  • Dirk Meyer-Olson

Abstract

HIV-1 infection is characterized by loss of CD56(dim) CD16(+) NK cells and increased terminal differentiation on various lymphocyte subsets. We identified a decrease of CD57(-) and CD57(dim) cells but not of CD57(bright) cells on CD56(dim) CD16(+) NK cells in chronic HIV infection. Increasing CD57 expression was strongly associated with increasing frequencies of killer immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) and granzyme B-expressing cells but decreasing percentages of cells expressing CD27(+), HLA-DR(+), Ki-67(+), and CD107a. Our data indicate that HIV leads to a decline of less-differentiated cells and suggest that CD57 is a useful marker for terminal differentiation on NK cells.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0022-538X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.2010
Extern publiziertJa
PubMed 19906929