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RSS FeedsIJMS, Vol. 20, Pages 5080: The Good and the Bad of Natural Killer Cells in Virus Control: Perspective for Anti-HBV Therapy (International Journal of Molecular Sciences)

 
 

13 october 2019 11:03:39

 
IJMS, Vol. 20, Pages 5080: The Good and the Bad of Natural Killer Cells in Virus Control: Perspective for Anti-HBV Therapy (International Journal of Molecular Sciences)
 


Immune modulatory therapies are widely believed to represent potential therapeutic strategies for chronic hepatitis B infection (CHB). Among the cellular targets for immune interventions, Natural Killer (NK) cells represent possible candidates because they have a key role in anti-viral control by producing cytokines and by exerting cytotoxic functions against virus-infected cells. However, in patients with chronic hepatitis B, NK cells have been described to be more pathogenic than protective with preserved cytolytic activity but with a poor capacity to produce anti-viral cytokines. In addition, NK cells can exert a regulatory activity and possibly suppress adaptive immune responses in the setting of persistent viral infections. Consequently, a potential drawback of NK-cell targeted modulatory interventions is that they can potentiate the suppressive NK cell effect on virus-specific T cells, which further causes impairment of exhausted anti-viral T cell functions. Thus, clinically useful NK-cell modulatory strategies should be not only suited to improve positive anti-viral NK cell functions but also to abrogate T cell suppression by NK cell-mediated T cell killing. This review outlines the main NK cell features with a particular focus on CHB infection. It describes different mechanisms involved in NK-T cell interplay as well as how NK cells can have positive anti-viral effector functions and negative suppressive effects on T cells activity. This review discusses how modulation of their balance can have potential therapeutic implications.


 
214 viewsCategory: Biochemistry, Biophysics, Molecular Biology
 
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