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* Division of Immunology and Allergy, Childrens Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115;
Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Allergy and Asthma, Chonnam National University Medical School and Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Gwangju, South Korea; and
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602
| Abstract |
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-galactosylceramide and which therefore were not classical type I iNKT cells, appear to represent an NKT cell subset restricted by a β2m-independent form of CD1d. These results indicate that, although classical type I iNKT cells are normally required for the development of AHR, under different circumstances other NKT cell subsets, including nonclassical NKT cells, may substitute for classical iNKT cells and induce AHR. | Introduction |
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14J
18 in mice or V
24 in humans, recognize lipid Ags such as
-galactosylceramide presented by CD1d, and rapidly produce large quantities of IL-4 and IL-13 (4, 5). Allergen-induced AHR fails to develop in CD1d–/– mice, which lack the restriction element of NKT cells and therefore lack NKT cells, and fails to develop in J
18–/– mice, which lack the conserved
-chain of the invariant TCR and therefore lack type I iNKT cells (2, 3, 6). Moreover, recent studies have shown that other forms of AHR induced by exposure to ozone or with pulmonary virus infection also require the presence of iNKT cells (7, 8). Since type I iNKT cells are increased in lungs of patients with severe asthma compared with that in normal individuals (8, 9, 10), we have hypothesized that type I iNKT cells play a critical role in regulating the development of at least several forms of asthma.
Classical type I iNKT cells represent only one of several subsets of NKT cells. For example, nonclassical type II NKT cells express a broad repertoire of (noninvariant)
and β TCR chains and although restricted by CD1d, type II NKT cells are not reactive with CD1d
-GalCer complexes. Nonclassical type II NKT cells are present in J
18–/– mice, which fail to develop AHR (2, 3), indicating that under normal circumstances nonclassical type II NKT cells are not capable of inducing or are not involved in the development of AHR. Furthermore, because type II NKT cells are difficult to isolate, study, and specifically activate until now, the role of type II NKT cells in the development of AHR has not been specifically examined. However, type II NKT cells are involved in regulating the development of other inflammatory diseases, including hepatitis (11), some forms of cancer (12), and human inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis) (13).
To more clearly understand the role of NKT cells and specifically the role of type II NKT cells in the development of asthma, we examined β2-microglobulin-deficient (β2m–/–) mice in a mouse model of asthma. β2m–/– mice do not express class I MHC molecules or CD1d and are thought to lack both type I and type II NKT cells (as well as CD8+ T cells). However, β2m–/– mice develop robust AHR responses when sensitized and challenged with allergen (14, 15), suggesting that AHR, at least in some circumstances, may develop in the absence of NKT cells. In our current studies, however, we showed that although allergen-induced AHR responses did indeed occur in β2m–/– mice, surprisingly the AHR response was blocked by both an anti-CD1d mAb and by an anti-NK1.1 mAb, but not by anti-asialo GM1 Ab, which eliminates NK cells. The β2m–/– mice failed to develop AHR when challenged with
-GalCer, demonstrating the absence of type I iNKT cells. Rather, these mice appeared to contain type II CD1d-restricted, NK1.1+ NKT cells, restricted by a β2m-independent form of CD1d and capable of inducing AHR in the β2m–/– mice. These results together suggest that the development of AHR under different circumstances may require the presence of different forms or subpopulations of NKT cells, including type I, classical iNKT cells, as well as a subset of type II NKT cells.
| Materials and Methods |
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Wild-type (WT) C57BL/6 mice and B6.129P2-B2mtm1Unc (β2m–/–) mice on the C57BL/6 background were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory. J
18–/– mice on the C57BL/6 background were a gift from M. Taniguchi (RIKEN, Yokohama, Japan) and T. Nakayama (Chiba University, Chiba, Japan). CD1d–/– mice on the C57BL/6 background were obtained from M. Exley (Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA). Animals were used between 6 and 11 wk of age and were age and sex matched. All animal protocols were approved by the Childrens Hospital Committee on animal welfare.
Induction of AHR and measurement of airway responsiveness
Mice were sensitized with 100 µg of OVA (Valeant Pharmaceuticals) adsorbed to 2 mg of an aqueous solution of alum i.p. on days 0 and 14, followed by 50 µg of OVA in 50 µl of PBS administered intranasally on days 14 and 25–27. Control mice received i.p. injections of PBS and intranasal administrations of normal saline. AHR was measured on day 28. AHR was assessed by invasive measurement of airway resistance, in which anesthetized and tracheostomized mice were mechanically ventilated using a described method (2). Aerosolized methacholine was administered for 20 breaths in increasing concentrations (saline, 1.25, 2.5, 5, and 10 mg/ml). We continuously computed lung resistance (RL) by fitting flow, volume, and pressure to an equation of motion. In some experiments, AHR was also assessed 24 h after glycolipid Ags were administered intranasally (2 µg of
-GalCer or 20 µg of Sphingomonas glycolipid Ag (PS-30), both in 50 µl) to mice anesthetized with isoflurane as described previously (16).
-GalCer was synthesized by P. B. Savage (Brigham Young University, Provo, UT). PS-30 (also known as PBS-30) was synthesized by P. B. Savage as previously described (17). We initially brought up the PS-30 Ag in 10% DMSO and PBS (4 µg/µl) and diluted to 1% DMSO before administration. Saline and 1% DMSO were used as controls for the
-GalCer and PS-30 challenges, respectively. In other experiments, CD1d–/– mice were reconstituted with NKT cell-enriched populations. These were prepared from the spleens of β2m–/– or WT mice depleted of B cells with anti-CD19 mAb by magnetic sorting. In brief, 2 x 107 purified splenic cells (
1.2 x 105 β2m–/– NKT cells or 3.2 x 105 WT NKT cells) with 106 bone marrow-derived dendritic cells were transferred i.v. into CD1d–/– mice on day 20, after sensitization on days 0 and 14 by immunization with OVA in alum. The mice were then challenged with OVA intranasally on days 21, 22, and 23 and analyzed for AHR on day 24.
Collection and analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid
Immediately after the AHR measurement, the trachea was cannulated, the lungs were lavaged two times with 0.5 ml of PBS, and the fluid was pooled. We counted and analyzed cells in BAL fluid as previously described (18). The relative number of different types of leukocytes was determined from slide preparations of BAL fluid stained with Diff-Quik solution (Dade Behring).
Restimulation of bronchial lymph node cells in vitro
Bronchial lymph node cells were obtained by mechanical disruption and were restimulated in vitro (5.0 x 105 cells/well in a round 96-well plate) with OVA. Supernatants were collected after 96 h and kept at –20°C until assayed to determine the secretion of cytokines in the cultures.
Lung and spleen cells isolation
Whole lungs were flushed with PBS injected into the right ventricle, removed, and rinsed in PBS. The lungs were then diced on a wax board before incubating in 9.6 ml of RPMI 1640 medium with 0.1% DNase I (fraction IX; Sigma-Aldrich) and 1.6 mg/ml collagenase (CSL4; Worthington Biochemicals) at 37°C on an orbital shaker for 30 min. The digest was passed multiple times through an 18-gauge needle and allowed to incubate for another 30 min before being filtered. RBC were removed by 4-min incubation in lysis buffer (Sigma-Aldrich) at room temperature. Single-cell suspensions of spleen lymphocytes were obtained by mechanical disruption and RBC lysis as above.
Flow cytometry for cell surface markers
We collected cells from BAL fluid, spleen, or lungs and stained with anti-CD45-PE-Cy5.5 (eBioscience), anti-CD45-PE-Texas Red (Caltag Laboratories), anti-TCRβ-allophycocyanin (eBioscience), anti-NK1.1-FITC (eBioscience),
-GalCer-loaded CD1d tetramer-PE (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease Tetramer Facility), CD8
-Alexa Fluor 700 (Caltag Laboratories), anti-CD49b-FITC (DX5; BD Pharmingen), anti-TCR
-PE-Cy5.5 (eBioscience), and CD4-Alexa Fluor 750 (eBioscience). Control samples were labeled with isotype-matched control Abs (mouse IgG2b-FITC (BD Pharmingen) for anti-NK1.1-FITC) and unloaded tetramer-PE (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease Tetramer Facility)). Analytical flow cytometry was done on a FACSCanto instrument (BD Biosciences). Analysis was performed with FlowJo software (Tree Star).
Detection of intracellular cytokines
Flow cytometric measurements of cytokine production in NKT cells were done as described previously (2). In brief, we stimulated NKT cells in some experiments with PMA (20 ng/ml) and ionomycin (500 ng/ml) for 3 h. Fixation and permeabilization were done on collected cells using Cytofix/Cytoperm and Perm/Wash (BD Pharmingen) according to the manufacturers instructions. Cytoplasmic IL-4, IL-13, and IFN-
were stained with anti-IL-4-PE (Caltag Laboratories), anti-IL-13-PE (eBioscience), and anti-IFN-
-PE (eBioscience). Control samples were labeled with isotype-matched control Ab (rat IgG1-PE; eBioscience).
Measurements of cytokines and OVA-specific serum IgE
ELISA for IL-4 assays were performed as described previously (18). The Ab pairs used were as follows, listed by capture/biotinylated detection: BVD4-1D11/BVD6-24G2. The standards were recombinant cytokine curves generated in 1/2 dilutions from 500 to 7.5 pg/ml. For the OVA-specific IgE assay, mice were bled and the OVA-specific IgE Abs were measured in serum using a modified OVA-specific ELISA as described previously (19).
NK1.1+ cell and NK cell depletion and CD1d blockade
NK1.1+ cells were depleted via a single i.p. injection of 500 µg of anti-NK1.1 mAb (PK136; mouse IgG2a) 4 days before the first intranasal OVA challenge. CD1d was blocked by two i.p. injections per week of 500 µg of β2m-independent anti-CD1d mAb (3C11; rat IgM, a gift from M. Exley, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School) or another anti-CD1d mAb (HB323) from 1 day before the start of sensitization through 1 day before the first intranasal OVA challenge. NK cells were depleted by treatment with anti-asialo GM1 Ab (Wako Chemicals) administered (0.025 ml i.v.) to β2m–/– mice on days –1, 4, 9, 13, 18, and 22. These mice were sensitized with OVA on days 7 and 14 and challenged with OVA on days 21, 22, and 23. PK136, 3C11, HB323, and isotype mouse IgG2a mAbs were purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and dialysis from ascites produced by hybridoma cells, which had been subcloned by limiting dilution. Isotype control rat IgM mAb was obtained from Millipore and dialyzed against PBS before use.
CFSE proliferation of NKT cells induced by B cells
NK1.1+ cells were isolated from spleens of WT and β2m–/– mice by incubation with anti-NK1.1 mAb and anti-biotin MACS beads (Miltenyi Biotec) using an autoMACS according to the manufacturers instructions. Purified NK1.1+ cells were labeled with CFSE (4 µM/ml). B cells from WT and β2m–/– mice were purified using anti-IgG plus IgM (H + L; Jaxson Research)-coated plates and stimulated with LPS (10 µg/ml) for 24 h. For proliferation, NK1.1+ cells (105 cells/well) were cultured either with 3C11 anti-CD1d mAb (10 µg/ml) or isotype control mAb (10 µg/ml) in the presence of LPS-stimulated B cells (104 cells/well). To measure proliferation, CFSE dilution was determined by FACS analysis after 72 h.
Statistical analysis
Nonlinear regression analyses were used to compare airway resistances between groups (Prism 4; GraphPad software). Otherwise, unpaired Students t tests were used for comparisons between groups (SPSS 14). A value of p < 0.05 was considered significant.
| Results |
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β2m–/– mice sensitized and challenged with OVA developed significant AHR (p < 0.0001, compared with saline-treated controls) comparable to AHR responses induced in WT C57BL/6 mice (Fig. 1A). In both β2m–/– and WT mice, OVA sensitization and challenge significantly increased the number of cells in the BAL fluid compared with saline control mice, with eosinophils comprising the majority of cells (Fig. 1B). OVA-specific CD4+ Th2 responses developed normally in β2m–/– and in WT mice, as OVA stimulation of bronchial lymph node cells from OVA-immunized β2m–/– and WT mice induced IL-4 production (Fig. 1C). In addition, OVA-specific IgE levels in serum were increased in OVA-immunized β2m–/– and WT mice, but not in control saline-treated mice (Fig. 1D). These data indicate that β2m–/– mice develop allergen-induced AHR with eosinophilic airway inflammation and OVA-specific Th2 and IgE responses that were equivalent or more severe than those observed in WT C57BL/6 mice.
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To determine the role of CD1d in the development of allergen-induced AHR in β2m–/– mice, β2m–/– mice were treated with anti-CD1d-blocking mAb before sensitization and challenge with OVA. The anti-CD1d mAb used, 3C11, has been shown to recognize CD1d molecules that may form in the absence of β2m (20). Treatment with anti-CD1d mAb significantly blocked the development of OVA-induced AHR, compared with treatment with no Ab (p = 0.001) or with an isotype control mAb (p < 0.0001; Fig. 2A). However, treatment with anti-CD1d mAb did not decrease the number of total cells and eosinophils in BAL fluids (Fig. 2B), OVA-induced IL-4 concentrations by bronchial lymph node cells (Fig. 2C), and serum OVA-specific IgE levels (Fig. 2D). Allergen-induced AHR in β2m–/– mice was also blocked by another anti-CD1d mAb, HB323 (data not shown). These data strongly suggest that β2m-independent CD1d-restricted NKT cells are required for the development of allergen-induced AHR in β2m–/– mice, but that eosinophilic airway inflammation and OVA-specific Th2 responses occurred independently of NKT cells, possibly as a result of OVA-specific Th2 cell development.
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To confirm the requirement of NKT cells for the development of allergen-induced AHR, we depleted NKT cells from lung and airways of β2m–/– mice using anti-NK1.1 mAb before assessment of AHR. In vivo treatment with anti-NK1.1 mAb but not isotype control mAb, 4 days before the first OVA challenge, completely depleted NK1.1+ T cells from OVA-immunized lung and BAL fluids in β2m–/– mice (Fig. 3, A and B). Splenic NKT cells were also depleted after treatment with anti-NK1.1 mAb in β2m–/– mice (data not shown). In addition, NK cells (NK1.1+ TCRβ– cells) were substantially reduced in lung (Fig. 3, A and C), BAL fluids (Fig. 3, A and C), and spleen (data not shown) after treatment with anti-NK1.1 mAb. The depletion of the NKT cells by anti-NK1.1 mAb was also shown by staining of NKT cells with DX5 mAb rather than anti-NK1.1 mAb. Thus, DX5+TCRβ+ NKT cells and DX5+ NK cells were substantially reduced in lung and BAL fluids after treatment with anti-NK1.1 mAb in β2m–/– mice (data not shown).
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Since the development of allergen-induced AHR has been shown to require the presence of type I iNKT cells (2, 3), we examined the β2m–/– mice for the presence of type I iNKT cells. Although CD1d-tetramer-binding type I iNKT cells were clearly observed in spleen, lung, and BAL fluid of OVA-immunized WT C57BL/6 mice, no type I NKT cells were detected in OVA-immunized β2m–/– mice (Fig. 5A). Furthermore, although intranasal administration
-GalCer, which specifically activates type I iNKT cells, induced AHR in WT C57BL/6 mice,
-GalCer failed to induce AHR in β2m–/– mice (Fig. 5B). In addition, another glycolipid, a constituent of Sphingomonas cell membranes synthesized as PS-30, activates type I iNKT cells to induce AHR after intranasal administration (16). This glycolipid PS-30 failed to induce AHR in β2m–/– mice, but induced significant AHR in WT C57BL/6 mice (Fig. 5C). These data indicate that β2m–/– mice do not have type I iNKT cells in lung and airways. However, OVA-immunized β2m–/– mice contained a population of type II NKT cells in spleen, lung, and BAL fluids, as defined by expression of NK1.1 and TCRβ. The number of NK1.1+, TCR+, NKT cells, however, was approximately one-half of the number present in WT C57BL/6 mice (Fig. 5D), but included 2.6% of the lymphocytes in the BAL fluid, following sensitization and challenge with OVA. These data indicate that β2m–/– mice clearly have type II NKT cells but no type I iNKT cells and suggest that these type II NKT cells are capable of inducing AHR in these mice.
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We compared the phenotype of NKT cells in β2m–/– mice with that in WT C57BL/6 and J
18–/– mice. As discussed earlier, CD1d tetramer-staining type I NKT cells were present in WT but not in β2m–/– or J
18–/– mice (Fig. 6A), but all three strains contained NK1.1+TCR+ NKT cells (Fig. 6B). In β2m–/– mice, NKT cells were CD4+ or CD4–CD8– double negative (DN) (no CD8+ cells present), while in WT and in J
18–/– mice the NKT cells were CD4+, CD8+, and DN (Fig. 6B). The NK1.1+ cells in the lungs and BAL fluid of the β2m–/– mice sensitized and challenged with OVA expressed
β and not 
TCRs (Fig. 6C). Furthermore, the splenic NKT cells from WT, β2m–/–, and J
18–/– mice produced IL-4 and IFN-
by intracellular cytokine staining after activation with PMA and ionomycin (Fig. 7A), indicating that at least some of the type II NKT cells present in β2m–/– mice had an unrestricted cytokine profile. Moreover, the pulmonary NKT cells from β2m–/– mice sensitized and challenged with OVA spontaneously produced (without further activation) IL-13, but not much IL-4 and IFN-
(Fig. 7B). These results indicate that IL-13 production from pulmonary type II NKT cells may contribute to the development of allergen-induced AHR in the β2m–/– mice. Finally, adoptive transfer of an NKT cell-enriched population purified from β2m–/– mice (or from WT mice) into NKT cell-deficient CD1d–/– mice rescued AHR (Fig. 7C) and airway inflammation (Fig. 7D). In these experiments, bone marrow-derived dendritic cells from WT mice were also transferred with the NKT cells to provide APC function. These studies indicate that the type II NKT cells in β2m–/– mice indeed function to induce AHR and airway inflammation.
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Based on our results, we hypothesized that AHR in the β2m–/– mice was caused by a NKT cell population that was restricted by a β2m-independent form of CD1d. This was confirmed by the fact that NKT cells purified from β2m–/– mice (or WT mice) proliferated when stimulated with B cells from β2m–/– mice (activated with LPS to induce expression of CD1d; Fig. 8, third column). This NKT cell proliferative response induced with B cells from β2m–/– mice was inhibited by anti-CD1d mAb (3C11) (Fig. 8, second row) but not isotype control mAb (Fig. 8, first row). These results provide very strong evidence for the existence of this NKT cells population (NK1.1+) in β2m–/– mice that is restricted by a β2M-independent form of CD1d.
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| Discussion |
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-GalCer and therefore by definition are not type I iNKT cells. Furthermore, the development of AHR in β2m–/– mice was surprisingly blocked both by anti-CD1d mAb and by anti-NK1.1 mAb, but not by depletion of NK cells. Moreover, purified NKT cells from β2m–/– mice proliferated in vitro to activated B cells from β2m–/– mice in a CD1d-dependent fashion. Finally, adoptive transfer of a NKT cell-enriched population from β2m–/– mice into NKT cell-deficient CD1d–/– mice rescued AHR and airway inflammation. Together these results strongly suggest that AHR responses that develop in β2m–/– mice are caused by a unique subset of NKT cells that express noninvariant TCRs and are restricted by a β2M-independent form of CD1d. The precise molecular structure of CD1d in β2m–/– mice is not entirely clear, since CD1d normally forms in association with β2m (21). However, several previous studies have demonstrated that cells transfected with CD1d express in the endoplasmic reticulum and on the cell surface a 45-kDa form of CD1d, independent of β2m (20, 22, 23, 24). Furthermore, human intestinal epithelial cells express CD1d in the absence of β2m, suggesting that β2m-independent CD1d-restricted type II NKT cells are normally present in humans (23). In our studies, the development of AHR was blocked by several anti-CD1d mAbs, including the 3C11 anti-CD1d mAb, which has been shown previously to block Ag presentation by β2m-independent CD1d (20) and the HB323 anti-CD1d mAb. Finally, the proliferation of purified NKT cells from β2m–/– mice to activated B cells from β2m–/– mice was blocked by the anti-CD1d mAb. Our studies therefore demonstrate for the first time that β2m-independent CD1d-restricted NKT cells can be pathogenic and responsible for the induction of AHR in the β2m–/– mice. What glycolipid Ags bind to and are presented by the β2m-independent form of CD1d to activate the type II NKT cells in β2m–/– mice are not yet clear, but these glycolipids are likely to be distinct from those that bind to the β2m-dependent form of CD1d.
Our current results demonstrating the role of CD1d- restricted type II NKT cells in causing AHR in β2m–/– mice explain the paradox of β2m–/– mice and AHR. Because β2m–/– mice were initially thought not to express CD1d and therefore not to contain any CD1d-restricted type I or type II NKT cells, the development of severe AHR responses in β2m–/– mice (14, 15) was perplexing, and suggested that NKT cells were not essential for the development of AHR. However, in this study, we demonstrated that β2m–/– mice do indeed contain a subset of NKT cells and provide strong evidence that (β2m independent)-CD1d restricted NKT cells are responsible for the allergen-induced AHR responses in these mice. Although recent studies have also demonstrated the presence of NKT cells in β2m–/– mice (25, 26), we now show that the NKT cells in β2m–/– mice are CD1d restricted and on adoptive transfer restore AHR responses in CD1d–/– but not J
18–/– mice. These results suggest that the type II NKT cells in β2m–/– mice may develop unique functions distinct from those in J
18–/– mice, such as the ability to induce AHR, possibly due to the absence of CD8+ T cells in the β2m–/– mice.
Previously, CD1d-restricted type II NKT cells have been shown to play important pathogenic roles in several other disease states. For example, in ulcerative colitis in humans, type II NKT cells are present in the lamina propria of the colon, produce IL-13 and IL-5, and are cytotoxic against intestinal epithelial cells (13), suggesting that type II NKT cells play a major effector cell role in the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis. In addition, in a transgenic mouse model of acute hepatitis B infection, type II NKT cells have been shown to cause liver cell injury (11). Furthermore, type II NKT cells regulate autoimmune diabetes in a TCR-transgenic mouse (27) and down-regulate tumor-immune surveillance in mouse models of cancer by enhancing TGF-β production (28, 29). These studies thus demonstrated a pathogenic role for type II NKT cells, which may be related to the type II NKT cells responsible for AHR.
In our studies, we noted a separation between AHR and airway inflammation in that blockade of NKT cell function in the β2m–/– mice prevented AHR but not eosinophilic airway inflammation. These results are consistent with previous observations indicating that the presence of airway inflammation is neither sufficient nor necessary for the development of AHR (30, 31). Importantly, AHR rather than airway inflammation is arguably the critical feature in asthma responsible for clinical symptoms observed in patients with asthma (32). In any case, our results indicate that the mechanisms responsible for AHR are distinct from those responsible for the development of airway inflammation. We believe that NKT cells (type I or type II in different situations) are uniquely involved in the induction of AHR, whereas CD4+ Th2 cells independently drive the eosinophilic inflammation in the airways and IgE production, although NKT cells may also induce some amount of airway inflammation independent of conventional CD4+ T cells (1, 16). Thus, treatment with anti-CD1d or anti-NK1.1 mAbs, while blocking NKT cell function, did not affect IL-4 production from OVA-specific Th2 cells in bronchial lymph node cells.
The specific mechanisms by which type I and type II NKT cells, but not Th2 cells induce AHR, are not yet clear. Type I and type II NKT cells as well as Th2 cells all produce Th2 cytokines, but Th2 cells in the absence of NKT cells cannot induce AHR (2, 3). Explanations for this include the possibility that NKT cells produce additional cytokines that may be responsible for AHR, that NKT cells produce larger quantities of IL-4/IL-13 than Th2 cells, or that Ag-specific Th2 cells may not be present in sufficient quantity to induce AHR in the absence of NKT cells. Nevertheless, it should be noted that another type I NKT cell subset producing IL-17 (33, 34) has been shown to be required for the development of AHR induced by exposure to ozone, a major component of air pollution (7). The ozone-induced form of AHR was associated with airway neutrophils rather than eosinophils and could occur in the complete absence of adaptive immunity, consistent with the idea that NKT cells rather than eosinophils or Th2 cells may be the common denominator required for the development of AHR. Clearly, much more must be learned about various subsets of NKT cells and Th cells to more completely understand how AHR is regulated.
Treatment of β2m–/– mice with anti-NK1.1 mAb depleted both NKT and NK cells and abolished AHR, suggesting that NK cells might contribute to the development of AHR. Previous studies have suggested that NK cells might be involved in the development of airway eosinophilia. Importantly, however, in those studies, AHR responses were not evaluated and therefore a role of NK cells in AHR could not be assessed (35, 36). In contrast, in our studies, we found that treatment with anti-CD1d mAb produced the same loss of AHR as did treatment with anti-NK1.1 mAb. Moreover, treatment with anti-asialo GM1 Ab to specifically remove NK cells had no effect on OVA-induced AHR in the β2m–/– mice. These results together suggest that NKT cells and not NK cells were responsible for the development of AHR in the β2m–/– mice.
In summary, β2m–/– mice developed allergen-induced AHR, which was abolished by treatment with anti-CD1d or anti-NK1.1 mAb, but not with anti-asialo GM1 Ab. We found that the β2m–/– mice contained a novel β2m-independent CD1d-restricted type II NKT cell, which we believe was responsible for the development of allergen-induced AHR. Thus, the development of AHR under different circumstances may require the presence of different forms or types of NKT cells, including type I as well as type II NKT cells. Each may be important in human patients with distinct forms of bronchial asthma.
| Acknowledgments |
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18–/– mice, the National Institutes of Health Tetramer Facility for CD1d tetramers, and Dr. Sam Strober (Stanford University) for critical discussions. | Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by Grants HL062348 and AI26322 from the National Institutes of Health, funds from the Bunning Food Allergy Project, and a research fund from Chonnam National University Research Institute of Medical Sciences (to Y.I.K.). ![]()
2 Y.I.K. and H.Y.K. contributed equally to the completion of these studies. ![]()
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Dale T. Umetsu, Division of Immunology and Allergy, Karp Laboratories, Room 10127, One Blackfan Circle, Childrens Hospital Boston, Boston, MA 02115. E-mail address: dale.umetsu{at}childrens.harvard.edu ![]()
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: AHR, airway hyperreactivity;
-GalCer,
-galactosylceramide; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; β2m, β2-microgolubin; DN, double negative; WT, wild type; iNKT, invariant NKT; RL, ling resistance. ![]()
Received for publication January 28, 2008. Accepted for publication July 27, 2008.
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14 NKT cells are required for allergen-induced airway inflammation and hyperreactivity in an experimental asthma model. J. Immunol. 171: 1637-1641.
24 natural killer T cells. J. Exp. Med. 195: 637-641.
4J
18 CD1d-restricted (type II) NKT cell is sufficient for down-regulation of tumor immunosurveillance. J. Exp. Med. 202: 1627-1633.
t and rapidly produce IL-17 upon receptor ligation in an IL-6-independent fashion. J. Immunol. 180: 5167-5171. This article has been cited by other articles:
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H. Y. Kim, M. Pichavant, P. Matangkasombut, Y. I. Koh, P. B. Savage, R. H. DeKruyff, and D. T. Umetsu The Development of Airway Hyperreactivity in T-bet-Deficient Mice Requires CD1d-Restricted NKT Cells J. Immunol., March 1, 2009; 182(5): 3252 - 3261. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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