Abstrakt: |
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) seems to play causative roles in gastric cancers. H. pylori has also been detected in established gastric cancers. How the presence of H. pylori modulates immune response to the cancer is unclear. The cytotoxicity of natural killer (NK) cells, toward infected or malignant cells, is controlled by the repertoire of activating and inhibitory receptors expressed on their surface. Here, we studied H. pylori‐induced changes in the expression of ligands, of activating and inhibitory receptors of NK cells, in the gastric adenocarcinoma AGS cells, and their impacts on NK cell responses. AGS cells lacked or had low surface expression of the class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC‐I) molecules HLA‐E and HLA‐C—ligands of the major NK cell inhibitory receptors NKG2A and killer‐cell Ig‐like receptor (KIR), respectively. However, AGS cells had high surface expression of ligands of activating receptors DNAM‐1 and CD2, and of the adhesion molecules LFA‐1. Consistently, AGS cells were sensitive to killing by NK cells despite the expression of inhibitory KIR on NK cells. Furthermore, H. pylori enhanced HLA‐C surface expression on AGS cells. H. pylori infection enhanced HLA‐C protein synthesis, which could explain H. pylori‐induced HLA‐C surface expression. H. pylori infection enhanced HLA‐C surface expression also in the hepatoma Huh7 and HepG2 cells. Furthermore, H. pylori‐induced HLA‐C surface expression on AGS cells promoted inhibition of NK cells by KIR, and thereby protected AGS cells from NK cell cytotoxicity. These results suggest that H. pylori enhances HLA‐C expression in host cells and protects them from the cytotoxic attack of NK cells expressing HLA‐C‐specific inhibitory receptors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |