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Department of Internal Medicine I, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany.
Upon entering the liver CD8 T cells encounter large numbers of NKT cells patrolling the hepatocyte (HC) surface facing the perisinusoidal space. We asked whether hepatic NKT cells modulate the priming of CD8 T cells by HC. Hepatic (alpha-galactosyl-ceramide-loaded CD1d dimer binding) NKT cells produce predominantly IL-4 when stimulated with glycolipid-presenting HC but predominantly IFN-gamma when stimulated with glycolipid-presenting dendritic cells. These NKT cells prime naive CD8 T cells to a (K(b)-presented) peptide ligand if they simultaneously recognize a CD1d-binding glycolipid presented to them on the surface of the responding CD8 T cells that they prime. No IL-10-producing CD8 T cells are detected if these T cells are primed by either HC or NKT cells. In contrast, IL-10 is produced by HC-primed CD8 T cells if IFN-beta-producing NKT cells are coactivated by the same HC presenting a glycolipid (in the context of CD1d) and an antigenic peptide (in the context of K(b)). Hence, IL-10-producing CD8 T cells are generated in a type I IFN-dependent manner if the three cell types (CD8 T cells, NKT cells, and ligand-presenting HC) specifically and closely interact. IL-10-producing CD8 T cells generated under these conditions down-modulate IL-2 (and proliferative) responses of naive CD4 or CD8 T cells primed by DC. If in close proximity, NKT cells can thus locally modulate the phenotype of CD8 T cells during their priming by HC thereby limiting the local activation of proinflammatory immune effector cells and protecting the liver against immune injury.
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