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Human natural killer (NK) cells with the CD3- CD16+ phenotype recognize allospecificities on normal T-cell blasts. The NK-defined specificity 1 (NK-1) is recessively inherited and has been mapped to the major histocompatibility complex between the complement gene cluster and HLA-A. A gene for NK-1, however, has not been identified. Here we demonstrate that NK-1 and the recently defined NK specificity 2 (NK-2) are reciprocally associated with homozygosity for a diallelic polymorphism at amino acid positions 77 and 80 in the putative peptide-binding site of HLA-C (P less than 10(-5)). NK-cell recognition of allogeneic cells may, therefore, be controlled by HLA-C itself or by a closely linked gene(s), which dominantly prevents (resistance alleles) or recessively permits (susceptibility alleles) recognition of still-unknown target determinants.
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Marco Colonna
National Institute of Genetics
Thomas A. Spies
Northwestern University
Jack L. Strominger
Boston University
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Harvard University
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Istituto Giannina Gaslini
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Colonna et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a18c544f58f28b4264aa57d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.17.7983