Science and Research

SARS-CoV-2 infection induces adaptive NK cell responses by spike protein-mediated induction of HLA-E expression

ABSTRACTHLA-E expression plays a central role for modulation of NK cell function by interaction with inhibitory NKG2A and stimulatory NKG2C receptors on canonical and adaptive NK cells, respectively. Here, we demonstrate that infection of human primary lung tissue with SARS-CoV-2 leads to increased HLA-E expression and show that processing of the peptide YLQPRTFLL from the spike protein is primarily responsible for the strong, dose-dependent increase of HLA-E. Targeting the peptide site within the spike protein revealed that a single point mutation was sufficient to abrogate the increase in HLA-E expression. Spike-mediated induction of HLA-E differentially affected NK cell function: whereas degranulation, IFN-

  • Hasan, M. Z.
  • Claus, M.
  • Krüger, N.
  • Reusing, S.
  • Gall, E.
  • Bade-Döding, C.
  • Braun, A.
  • Watzl, C.
  • Uhrberg, M.
  • Walter, L.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1080/22221751.2024.2361019
Journal: Emerg Microbes Infect
Pages: 2361019 
Work Type: Original
Location: BREATH
Disease Area: PALI
Partner / Member: ITEM, MHH
Access-Number: 38804979

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