News and Research
Immune System
Natural Killer Cells Are Made, Not Born

2-9-2004
Call it the immune system's version of nature versus nurture.
For years, scientists regarded natural killer cells as a
blunt instrument of the body's immune defense system. Born
to kill, these cells were thought to travel straight from
the bone marrow, where they are manufactured, to the blood,
circulating there and infiltrating the sites of early tumors
or infectious agents in the body.
Now,
Rockefeller University scientists, led by Christian Münz,
Ph.D., have learned otherwise. Natural killer cells, Münz
and his colleagues say, have to be nurtured. Their ability
to destroy tumor and infected cells is not present at birth.
This
new insight paves the road to changes in bone marrow and
stem cell transplant procedures and will enable scientists
to pursue research into activating natural killer cells
to help the body fight emerging infections and tumors.
In
two separate papers in the February issue of The Journal
of Immunology, Münz, postdoctoral associate Guido Ferlazzo,
Ph.D. and their colleagues, show that natural killer cells
accumulate mostly in "secondary lymphoid tissues"
-- the tonsils, lymph nodes and spleen -- after emerging
from the bone marrow. There, the natural killer cells await
activation (probably after stimulation by sentinel dendritic
cells) before they react in two distinct modes. In one mode,
they promptly secrete cytokines, chemical messenger proteins,
which modulate emerging T and B immune cell responses. In
the other, they become potent killers of tumors and virus-infected
cells. While natural killer cells do provide a crucial first
defense against many infectious agents and tumor cells,
they do so with more discrimination than raw determination.
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"Natural
killer cells burst forth from the the tonsils, lymph nodes and
spleen, and destroy infected and cancerous cells while the immune
system's T and B cells are still mobilizing," says Münz.
"Without natural killer cells, threatening conditions can
get a strong foothold before the adaptive immune response kicks
in."
Leading oncologists treating human leukemias and lymphomas
already track natural killer cell activities after bone marrow and
stem cell transplants. James Young, M.D., a researcher at Rockefeller's
neighboring Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center's Allogenic Bone
Marrow and Stem Cell Transplant Service, is one of them. "The
emerging data on the activation of natural killer cells, their distinct
functions in the body and their cellular targets, are helping to move
the study of natural killer cells in transplantation and cancer from
conjecture to sound hypotheses," he says.
The findings by Münz and his colleagues not only
explain why a natural killer burst is important – the burst
likely results from mobilization of natural killer cells from lymphoid
tissues, and these activated immune cells are discriminating enough
to recognize, through a full repertoire of surface receptors, virus-infected
and tumor cells – it also affirms a potential strategic change
in bone marrow or stem cell donor matching.
Bone marrow donors are selected based on the similarity
of their white blood cell profiles: the closer the match to the patient,
the better. But that's likely less important when doctors can harness
the donor's natural killer cells to fight both residual cancer cells
and residual immune system cells of the patient. Certain mismatches
between donor and recipient can actually encourage the donor's natural
killer cells to deliver an extra punch to the cancer and the threatening
graft-versus-host disease, the updated logic goes.
Münz and his colleagues did not develop the bone
marrow donor match strategy, but part of their aim in understanding
where and how natural killers hang out, was to determine how the cells
are recruited to combat cancer and other emerging diseases in the
body. The Rockefeller scientists are in close contact with clinicians
interested in tailoring immune cells -- such as natural killers --
in treating human leukemias.
The current Journal of Immunology publications also
contribute to strategies for dealing with the viral menace known as
Epstein-Barr virus, a member of the herpes family of viruses. Though
most infections are latent, active Epstein-Barr is the source of infectious
mononucleosis in many teenagers.
Epstein-Barr also is a human cancer-causing virus.
The virus transforms the immune system's B cells in an elaborate chemical
signaling mimicry of normal B cells, and is associated with B cell
tumors like Hodgkin's disease and Burkitt's lymphoma. Münz and
his colleagues know that the natural killer cell response, or burst,
is important in establishing immune control against the cancer causing
Epstein-Barr virus.
"We have seen that Epstein-Barr virus transformation
of B cells can be delayed by a strong natural killer cell burst,"
says Münz. "Now we are studying how this herpes virus may
be targeted by natural killer cell responses." By learning both
what molecular signals activate natural killer cells in their dialogue
with dendritic cells and how viruses can be targeted by natural killer
cells, Münz and his colleagues may be able to artificially stimulate
natural killer cells to heighten their effect and ward off emerging
Epstein-Barr virus associated malignancies.
"We're trying to get a sum of all signals that
activate natural killer cells against viruses and tumors and do not
cause harm to healthy human tissues," says Münz. "In
the past five years, we've learned enough about these cells to extend
hopes of their eventual usefulness in medical treatments."
This research was funded by the Leukemia & Lymphoma
Society and the New York Academy of Medicine.
This article has been adapted from a news release
issued by Rockefeller University, www.rockefeller.edu/ru.home.php.
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