Kinetics and Cellular Site of Glycolipid Loading Control the Outcome of Natural Killer T Cell Activation

Jin S. Im(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Pooja Arora(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Gabriel Bricard(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Alberto Molano(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Manjunatha M. Venkataswamy(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Ian Baine(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Elliot S. Jerud(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Michael F. Goldberg(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Andrés Baena(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Karl O. A. Yu(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Rachel M. Ndonye(University of Connecticut), Amy R. Howell(University of Connecticut), Weiming Yuan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Peter Cresswell(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Young‐Tae Chang(National University of Singapore), Petr A. Illarionov(University of Birmingham), Gurdyal S. Besra(University of Birmingham), Steven A. Porcelli(Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Immunity
June 1, 2009
Cited by 174Open Access
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Abstract

CD1d-restricted natural killer T cells (NKT cells) possess a wide range of effector and regulatory activities that are related to their ability to secrete both T helper 1 (Th1) cell- and Th2 cell-type cytokines. We analyzed presentation of NKT cell activating alpha galactosylceramide (alphaGalCer) analogs that give predominantly Th2 cell-type cytokine responses to determine how ligand structure controls the outcome of NKT cell activation. Using a monoclonal antibody specific for alphaGalCer-CD1d complexes to visualize and quantitate glycolipid presentation, we found that Th2 cell-type cytokine-biasing ligands were characterized by rapid and direct loading of cell-surface CD1d proteins. Complexes formed by association of these Th2 cell-type cytokine-biasing alphaGalCer analogs with CD1d showed a distinctive exclusion from ganglioside-enriched, detergent-resistant plasma membrane microdomains of antigen-presenting cells. These findings help to explain how subtle alterations in glycolipid ligand structure can control the balance of proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory activities of NKT cells.


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