Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5918064 Molecular Immunology 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

HLA-G is a non-classical HLA class I molecule involved in immunotolerance. HLA-G protects the fetus from maternal immune recognition and promotes allograft acceptance and tumor escape. Its low polymorphism and primary function, which is not peptide presentation to T lymphocytes, led us to compare the signal transduced after interaction between HLA-G and its receptor to those of innate immunity receptors with their ligands. We investigated the role of HLA-G in the classical NF-κB pathway in natural killer (NK) cells, which is the major pathway activated by innate immunity receptors. In NK cells stimulated with HLA-G1-expressed cells, we demonstrate that HLA-G induces the phosphorylation and the degradation of IκBα leading to nuclear translocation of NF-κB. This effect is independent of the presence of ILT-2 receptors and is still observed using a peptide corresponding to the alpha-1 domain of HLA-G. All these data support an unsuspected role for HLA-G in innate immunity by activating classical NF-κB pathway in NK cells.

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