|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : NKG2A inhibits invariant NKT cell activation in hepatic injury.

First Author  Kawamura T Year  2009
Journal  J Immunol Volume  182
Issue  1 Pages  250-8
PubMed ID  19109156 Mgi Jnum  J:143037
Mgi Id  MGI:3822683 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.182.1.250
Citation  Kawamura T, et al. (2009) NKG2A inhibits invariant NKT cell activation in hepatic injury. J Immunol 182(1):250-8
abstractText  Activation of invariant NKT (iNKT) cells in the liver is generally regarded as the critical step for Con A-induced hepatitis, and the role of NK cell receptors for iNKT cell activation is still controversial. In this study we show that blockade of the NKG2A-mediated inhibitory signal with antagonistic anti-NKG2A/C/E mAb (20d5) aggravated Con A-induced hepatitis in wild-type, Fas ligand (FasL)-mutant gld, and IL-4-deficient mice even with NK cell and CD8 T cell depletion, but not in perforin-, IFN-gamma-, or IFN-gamma- and perforin-deficient mice. Consistently, 20d5 pretreatment augmented serum IFN-gamma levels and perforin-dependent cytotoxicity of liver mononuclear cells following Con A injection, but not their FasL/Fas-dependent cytotoxicity. However, blockade of NKG2A-mediated signals during the cytotoxicity effector phase did not augment cytotoxic activity. Activated iNKT cells promptly disappeared after Con A injection, whereas NK1(-) iNKT cells, which preferentially expressed CD94/NKG2A, predominantly remained in the liver. Pretreatment with 20d5 appeared to facilitate disappearance of iNKT cells, particularly NK1(-) iNKT cells. Moreover, Con A-induced and alpha-galactosylceramide-induced hepatic injury was very severe in CD94/NKG2A-deficient DBA/2J mice compared with CD94/NKG2A-intact DBA/2JJcl mice. Overall, these results indicated that a NKG2A-mediated signal negatively regulates iNKT cell activation and hepatic injury.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

9 Bio Entities

0 Expression