A Subset of Liver NK T Cells Is Activated during<i>Leishmania donovani</i>Infection by CD1d-bound Lipophosphoglycan

Joseph L. Amprey(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Jin S. Im(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Salvatore J. Turco(University of Kentucky), Henry W. Murray(Cornell University), Petr A. Illarionov(University of Birmingham), Gurdyal S. Besra(University of Birmingham), Steven A. Porcelli(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Gérald F. Späth(New York University)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
October 4, 2004
Cited by 202Open Access
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Abstract

Natural killer (NK) T cells are activated by synthetic or self-glycolipids and implicated in innate host resistance to a range of viral, bacterial, and protozoan pathogens. Despite the immunogenicity of microbial lipoglycans and their promiscuous binding to CD1d, no pathogen-derived glycolipid antigen presented by this pathway has been identified to date. In the current work, we show increased susceptibility of NK T cell-deficient CD1d(-/-) mice to Leishmania donovani infection and Leishmania-induced CD1d-dependent activation of NK T cells in wild-type animals. The elicited response was Th1 polarized, occurred as early as 2 h after infection, and was independent from IL-12. The Leishmania surface glycoconjugate lipophosphoglycan, as well as related glycoinositol phospholipids, bound with high affinity to CD1d and induced a CD1d-dependent IFNgamma response in naive intrahepatic lymphocytes. Together, these data identify Leishmania surface glycoconjugates as potential glycolipid antigens and suggest an important role for the CD1d-NK T cell immune axis in the early response to visceral Leishmania infection.


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