Science, Vol.268, No.5209, 405-408, 1995
Cloning of Immunoglobulin-Superfamily Members Associated with HLA-C and HLA-B Recognition by Human Natural-Killer-Cells
Cytotoxicity by natural killer (NK) cells is inhibited by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules on target cells. This inhibition may be mediated by NK receptors with different MHC specificities. A family of four NK-specific complementary DNAs (cDNAs), designated NKATs (NK-associated transcripts), was identified that encoded related transmembrane proteins, characterized by an extracellular region with two or three immunoglobulin-superfamily domains and by a cytoplasmic domain with an unusual antigen receptor activation motif (ARAM). The distribution of these cDNAs was clonotypic and correlated with NK cell inhibition by particular class I alleles. Thus, NKAT cDNAs may encode receptors for class I molecules on NK cells.
Keywords:NK CLONES;ALLOANTIGEN RECOGNITION;ANTIGEN RECOGNITION;EXPRESSION;MOLECULES;SPECIFICITY;RECEPTORS;LYSIS;GENE;HETEROGENEITY