HLA-E is a major ligand for the natural killer inhibitory receptor CD94/NKG2A

N Lee, M Llano, M Carretero… - Proceedings of the …, 1998 - National Acad Sciences
N Lee, M Llano, M Carretero, A Ishitani, F Navarro, M López-Botet, DE Geraghty
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998National Acad Sciences
We previously showed that the availability of a nonamer peptide derived from certain HLA
class I signal sequences is a necessary requirement for the stabilization of endogenous HLA-
E expression on the surface of 721.221 cells. This led us to examine the ability of HLA-E to
protect HLA class I transfectants from natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis. It was possible
to implicate the CD94/NKG2A complex as an inhibitory receptor recognizing this class Ib
molecule by using as target a. 221 transfectant selectively expressing surface HLA-E. HLA-E …
We previously showed that the availability of a nonamer peptide derived from certain HLA class I signal sequences is a necessary requirement for the stabilization of endogenous HLA-E expression on the surface of 721.221 cells. This led us to examine the ability of HLA-E to protect HLA class I transfectants from natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis. It was possible to implicate the CD94/NKG2A complex as an inhibitory receptor recognizing this class Ib molecule by using as target a .221 transfectant selectively expressing surface HLA-E. HLA-E had no apparent inhibitory effect mediated through the identified Ig superfamily (Ig-SF) human killer cell inhibitory receptors or ILT2/LIR1. Further studies of CD94/NKG2+ NK cell-mediated recognition of .221 cells transfected with different HLA class I allotypes (i.e., -Cw4, -Cw3, -B7) confirmed that the inhibitory interaction was mediated by CD94/NKG2A recognizing the surface HLA-E molecule, because only antibodies directed against either HLA-E, CD94, or CD94/NKG2A specifically restored lysis. Surface stabilization of HLA-E in cold-treated .221 cells loaded with appropriate peptides was sufficient to confer protection, resulting from recognition of the HLA class Ib molecule by the CD94/NKG2A inhibitory receptor. Consistent with the prediction that the ligand for CD94/NKG2A is expressed ubiquitously, our examination of HLA-E antigen distribution indicated that it is detectable on the surface of a wide variety of cell types.
National Acad Sciences