The phenotypic heterogeneity of human natural killer cells: presence of at least 48 different subsets in the peripheral blood
- PMID: 11169213
- DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-3083.2001.00838.x
The phenotypic heterogeneity of human natural killer cells: presence of at least 48 different subsets in the peripheral blood
Abstract
Peripheral blood natural killer (NK) cells are usually defined as a homogeneous cell population. However, NK cells show heterogeneous expression of a diversity of cell surface molecules, which might reflect the diversity of NK-cell functions. Therefore, a more specific phenotypic definition of NK cells is necessary. In this study, we made an inventory of phenotypic subsets that are present within the peripheral blood NK-cell population of healthy donors based on differential expression of nine cell-surface markers. Using three-colour flow cytometric analysis we were able to define at least 48 different CD56(+) NK-cell subsets within the peripheral blood. This phenotypic heterogeneity appeared to be stable among healthy individuals, and was also steady within CD56(dim) and CD56(bright) NK populations, indicating a possible role for these subsets in NK-cell function or differentiation.
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