Requirement for IRF-1 in the microenvironment supporting development of natural killer cells

K Ogasawara, S Hida, N Azimi, Y Tagaya, T Sato… - Nature, 1998 - nature.com
K Ogasawara, S Hida, N Azimi, Y Tagaya, T Sato, T Yokochi-Fukuda, TA Waldmann
Nature, 1998nature.com
Natural killer (NK) cells are critical for both innate and adaptive immunity,. The development
of NK cells requires interactions between their progenitors and the bone-marrow
microenvironment,,,; however, little is known about the molecular nature of such interactions.
Mice that do not express the transcription factor interferon-regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1; such
mice are IRF-1−/− mice) have been shown to exhibit a severe NK-cell deficiency,. Here we
demonstrate that the lack of IRF-1 affects the radiation-resistant cells that constitute the …
Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells are critical for both innate and adaptive immunity,. The development of NK cells requires interactions between their progenitors and the bone-marrow microenvironment,,,; however, little is known about the molecular nature of such interactions. Mice that do not express the transcription factor interferon-regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1; such mice are IRF-1−/− mice) have been shown to exhibit a severe NK-cell deficiency,. Here we demonstrate that the lack of IRF-1 affects the radiation-resistant cells that constitute the microenvironment required for NK-cell development, but not the NK-cell progenitors themselves. We also show that IRF-1−/− bone-marrow cells can generate functional NK cells whencultured with the cytokine interleukin-15 (-) and that the interleukin-15 gene is transcriptionally regulated by IRF-1. These results reveal, for the first time, a molecular mechanism by which the bone-marrow microenvironment supports NK-cell development.
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