NKT lymphocyte ontogeny and function are impaired in low antibody-producer Biozzi mice: gene mapping in the interval-specific congenic strains raised for immunomodulatory genes

2000 
NKT cells are CD4 or CD4 ‐ CD8 ‐ CD1d-restricted lymphocytes, characterized by the property to rapidly produce IL-4 and IFN-γ in response to TCR ligation. This IL-4 burst is lacking in autoimmunity-prone SJL and NOD strains of mice, which suggests an immunoregulatory role for NKT cells. The NKT cell status was thus investigated in the genetically selected high (H) and low (L) antibody-producer mice. The results show that (i) the frequency of cells expressing the NKT cell markers is 3- to 4-fold lower in thymus and spleen from L than H mice, (ii) L mice spleen cells did not produce IL-4 following injection of anti-TCRαβ antibody, and (iii) L mice thymus and spleen cells failed to produce IL-4 after in vitro stimulation by anti-TCRαβ antibody or α-galactosylceramide, a newly described NKT cell ligand. These parameters were investigated in six interval-specific congenic strains raised for the quantitative trait loci which contain the immunomodulatory genes responsible for the high/low antibody production phenotypes. IL-4 production recovery occurred only in the congenic strain in which the H origin chromosome 4 segment was introgressed on the L background. This finding was not due to increased NKT cell frequency but appeared dependent of antigen-presenting cells in co-culture experiments. This result strongly suggests the presence of gene(s) modulating NKT function on chromosome 4, close to several genes predisposing to autoimmunity.
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