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Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a β-herpes virus that causes life-long infection as a latent virus in its host. Its prevalence depends on socioeconomic geographical factors and can affect 50–90% of the population depending on these factors. HCMV infection is usually asymptomatic in healthy individuals. However, in patients lacking proper immune responses, such as following hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), HCMV can reactivate and increase the mortality and morbidity rates in these patients. We set to investigate the role of a population of innate cells, the adaptive Natural Killer (NK) cells, in the response to HCMV reactivation after HSCT. Our findings revealed that adaptive NK cells are modulated in response to HCMV reactivation after HSCT. Furthermore, in addition to their ability to eliminate HCMV-infected target cells after in vitro expansion, we have also shown that adaptive NK cells recruit T cells in response to co-culture with HCMV-infected target cells and identified secreted factors possibly involved in this recruitment.