Influence of Fetomaternal Microchimerism on Maternal NK Cell Reactivity against the Child's Leukemic Blasts

HLA; KIR; NK cell alloreactivity; fetal microchimerism; haploidentical stem cell transplantation.
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Lena-Marie Martin, Anne Kruchen, Boris Fehse, Ingo Müller

  • Biomedicines
  • 4.757
  • 2022 Mar 4;10(3):603.
  • Human
  • 流式
  • 循环系统
  • 自然杀伤细胞
  • 白血病
  • CD55

Abstract

Persistence of fetal cells in the circulation of the mother (fetal microchimerism, FM) is associated with increased survival and reduced relapse of children with leukemia receiving a haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (hHSCT). NK cells play an important role in maternal tolerance towards the unborn child. In this study, 70 mother-child pairs were prospectively analyzed for the occurrence of FM, KIR genotype and HLA-C type. We found that occurrence and level of FM were influenced by three maternal genetic factors: presence of an HLA-C1 allele, absence of KIR2DL3 and presence of a cen-B/B motif. Furthermore, an HLA-C match between mother and child favored persistence of FM. NK cells from FM+ mothers showed a 40% higher specific degranulation against their filial leukemic blasts than NK cells from FM- mothers, suggesting the presence of educated maternal NK cells. Nevertheless, cytotoxicity of parental NK cells against filial leukemic blasts was independent of KIR genetics (haplotype, B content score, centromeric and telomeric KIR gene regions) and independent of FM, indicating that additional immune effector mechanisms contribute to the beneficial effect of persisting FM in hHSCT.Keywords: HLA; KIR; NK cell alloreactivity; fetal microchimerism; haploidentical stem cell transplantation.
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