NK recognition of target structures: is the transferrin receptor the NK target structure?

Abstract
That the transferrin receptor acts as a target antigen for human NK cells has previously been suggested. In this study we used two models to examine the hypothesis that the transferrin receptor is recognized by NK cells. In the first model, we employed mouse cloned NK cells in conjunction with the species-specific monoclonal antibody R17 217, which binds to the murine transferrin receptor. We show that there is no correlation between the amount of transferrin receptor expressed on targets and the susceptibility of these targets to NK lysis or NK binding in cold target competition assays. In the second model, we used human NK cells and transferrin receptor-positive transformants as targets. These transformants were derived from mouse L cells transfected with human DNA and selected for the presence of human transferrin receptor. Results show that, in contrast to the mouse system, there is a correlation between the expression of the human transferrin receptor on targets and the ability of these targets to competitively inhibit the lysis of K562 by NK cells. However, because inhibition is not complete, other cell surface antigens probably play a role in human NK-target interactions.

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