Author/Authors :
Melissa R. Snyder، نويسنده , , Cornelia M. Weyand، نويسنده , , J?rg J. Goronzy، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Stimulatory killer immunoglobulin-like receptors, NKG2D and stimulatory receptors of the CD94–NKG2 family have duplicity in function. On natural killer (NK) cells, these receptors act as independent and competent recognition units. Stimulatory NK receptors also appear on subsets of effector T cells, particularly those that have replicated extensively. When expressed on T cells, they amplify signals mediated through the T-cell antigen receptor and, thus, function as co-stimulatory, but not direct stimulatory, molecules. One mechanism responsible for this dichotomy is the differential expression of adaptor molecules. This duplicity in function, which is not seen for other co-stimulatory molecules, is responsible for the unique context information provided by the NK receptors, and it could explain their involvement in chronic inflammation and autoimmunity.