NK cells are an important subset of innate immune effectors with antiviral activity. However, NK cell development and immune responses in different tissues during acute and chronic HIV infection in vivo have been difficult to study due to the impaired development and function of NK cells in conventional humanized mouse models. In this issue of the JCI, Sangur et al. report on a transgenic MISTRG-6-15 mouse model with human IL-6 and IL-15 knocked into the previously constructed MISTRG mice. The predecessor model was deficient in Rag2 and γ chain (γc) with knock-in expression of human M-CSF, IL-3, GM-CSF, and TPO, and transgenic expression of human SIRPα. The researchers studied tissue–specific NK cell immune responses during HIV infection and clearly show that the endogenous human NK cells in the humanized mouse model suppressed HIV-1 replication in vivo. These findings provide insight into harnessing the innate immune response for clinical antiviral therapies.
Jocelyn T. Kim, Jerome A. Zack
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