"Tissue-resident memory NK cells" Professor Mariapia Degli-Esposti, Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute, Department of Microbiology Cancer and Infection Programs, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia — 03.06.2024 St.Gallen Vergangene Veranstaltung
Eckdaten
Ortschaft | St.Gallen |
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Veranstaltungsort | HOCH Health Ostschweiz, Kantonsspital St.Gallen, Haus 11 |
Raum | Raum 049 (EG) |
Datum | 03.06.2024 17:00 Uhr |
Beschreibung
Natural killer (NK) cells are the prototype innate effector lymphocyte population that plays an important role in controlling viral infections and tumors. Studies demonstrating that NK cells form long-lived memory populations, akin to those generated by adaptive immune cells, prompted a revaluation of the potential functions of NK cells. Recent data demonstrating that NK cells are recruited from the circulation into tissues where they form long-lived memory-like populations further emphasize that NK cells have properties that mirror those of adaptive immune cells. NK cells that localize in non-lymphoid tissues are heterogeneous, and there is a growing appreciation that immune responses occurring within tissues are subject to tissue-specific regulation. Here we discuss both the immune effector and immunoregulatory functions of NK cells, with a particular emphasis on the role of NK cells within non-lymphoid tissues and how the tissue microenvironment shapes NK cell-dependent outcomes.