Natural killer cells induce distinct modes of cancer cell death: Discrimination, quantification, and modulation of apoptosis, necrosis, and mixed forms

Journal of Biological Chemistry(2018)

Cited 63|Views20
No score
Abstract
Immune therapy of cancer is among the most promising recent advances in medicine. Whether the immune system can keep cancer in check depends on, among other factors, the efficiency of immune cells to recognize and eliminate cancer cells. We describe a time-resolved single-cell assay that reports the quality, quantity, and kinetics of target cell death induced by single primary human natural killer (NK) cells. The assay reveals that single NK cells induce cancer cell death by apoptosis and necrosis but also by mixed forms. Inhibition of either one of the two major cytotoxic pathways, perforin/granzyme release or FasL/FasR interaction, unmasked the parallel activity of the other one. Ca2+ influx through Orai channels is important for tuning killer cell function. We found that the apoptosis/necrosis ratio of cancer cell death by NK cells is controlled by the magnitude of Ca2+ entry and furthermore by the relative concentrations of perforin and granzyme B. The possibility to change the apoptosis/necrosis ratio employed by NK cells offers an intriguing possibility to modulate the immunogenicity of the tumor microenvironment.
More
Translated text
Key words
natural killer cells (NK cells),cancer,apoptosis,necrosis (necrotic death),cell death,calcium,caspase,cellular immune response,imaging,immunology
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined