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Publication : NK Cells Are Critical for Optimal Immunity to Experimental <i>Trypanosoma congolense</i> Infection.

First Author  Onyilagha C Year  2019
Journal  J Immunol Volume  203
Issue  4 Pages  964-971
PubMed ID  31243088 Mgi Jnum  J:279699
Mgi Id  MGI:6343178 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1900103
Citation  Onyilagha C, et al. (2019) NK Cells Are Critical for Optimal Immunity to Experimental Trypanosoma congolense Infection. J Immunol 203(4):964-971
abstractText  NK cells are key innate immune cells that play critical roles in host defense. Although NK cells have been shown to regulate immunity to some infectious diseases, their role in immunity to Trypanosoma congolense has not been investigated. NK cells are vital sources of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha; two key cytokines that are known to play important roles in resistance to African trypanosomes. In this article, we show that infection with T. congolense leads to increased levels of activated and functional NK cells in multiple tissue compartments. Systemic depletion of NK cells with anti-NK1.1 mAb led to increased parasitemia, which was accompanied by significant reduction in IFN-gamma production by immune cells in the spleens and liver of infected mice. Strikingly, infected NFIL3(-/-) mice (which genetically lack NK cell development and function) on the normally resistant background were highly susceptible to T. congolense infection. These mice developed fulminating and uncontrolled parasitemia and died significantly earlier (13 +/- 1 d) than their wild-type control mice (106 +/- 26 d). The enhanced susceptibility of NFIL3(-/-) mice to infection was accompanied by significantly impaired cytokine (IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha) response by CD3(+) T cells in the spleens and liver. Adoptive transfer of NK cells into NFIL3(-/-) mice before infection rescued them from acute death in a perforin-dependent manner. Collectively, these studies show that NK cells are critical for optimal resistance to T. congolense, and its deficiency leads to enhanced susceptibility in infected mice.
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