학술논문

MICB Genomic Variant Is Associated with NKG2D-mediated Acute Lung Injury and Death.
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 209(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Rare Diseases
Clinical Research
Genetics
Lung
Transplantation
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Respiratory
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Acute Lung Injury
Genomics
Histocompatibility Antigens Class I
NK Cell Lectin-Like Receptor Subfamily K
Primary Graft Dysfunction
acute respiratory distress syndrome
primary graft dysfunction
acute lung injury
NK cells
Medical and Health Sciences
Respiratory System
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Rationale: Acute lung injury (ALI) carries a high risk of mortality but has no established pharmacologic therapy. We previously found that experimental ALI occurs through natural killer (NK) cell NKG2D receptor activation and that the cognate human ligand, MICB, was associated with ALI after transplantation. Objectives: To investigate the association of a common missense variant, MICBG406A, with ALI. Methods: We assessed MICBG406A genotypes within two multicenter observational study cohorts at risk for ALI: primary graft dysfunction (N = 619) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (N = 1,376). Variant protein functional effects were determined in cultured and ex vivo human samples. Measurements and Main Results: Recipients of MICBG406A-homozygous allografts had an 11.1% absolute risk reduction (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.2-19.4%) for severe primary graft dysfunction after lung transplantation and reduced risk for allograft failure (hazard ratio, 0.36; 95% CI, 0.13-0.98). In participants with sepsis, we observed 39% reduced odds of moderately or severely impaired oxygenation among MICBG406A-homozygous individuals (95% CI, 0.43-0.86). BAL NK cells were less frequent and less mature in participants with MICBG406A. Expression of missense variant protein MICBD136N in cultured cells resulted in reduced surface MICB and reduced NKG2D ligation relative to wild-type MICB. Coculture of variant MICBD136N cells with NK cells resulted in less NKG2D activation and less susceptibility to NK cell killing relative to the wild-type cells. Conclusions: These data support a role for MICB signaling through the NKG2D receptor in mediating ALI, suggesting a novel therapeutic approach.