Genetics, genomics, and evolutionary biology of NKG2D ligands.

Fiche publication


Date publication

septembre 2015

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr BAHRAM Siamak


Tous les auteurs :
Carapito R, Bahram S

Résumé

Human and mouse NKG2D ligands (NKG2DLs) are absent or only poorly expressed by most normal cells but are upregulated by cell stress, hence, alerting the immune system in case of malignancy or infection. Although these ligands are numerous and highly variable (at genetic, genomic, structural, and biochemical levels), they all belong to the major histocompatibility complex class I gene superfamily and bind to a single, invariant, receptor: NKG2D. NKG2D (CD314) is an activating receptor expressed on NK cells and subsets of T cells that have a key role in the recognition and lysis of infected and tumor cells. Here, we review the molecular diversity of NKG2DLs, discuss the increasing appreciation of their roles in a variety of medical conditions, and propose several explanations for the evolutionary force(s) that seem to drive the multiplicity and diversity of NKG2DLs while maintaining their interaction with a single invariant receptor.

Référence

Immunol Rev. 2015 Sep;267(1):88-116