Liver CD4(-)CD8(-) NK1.1(+) TCR alpha beta intermediate cells increase during experimental malaria infection and are able to exhibit inhibitory activity against the parasite liver stage in vitro
S. Pied et al., Liver CD4(-)CD8(-) NK1.1(+) TCR alpha beta intermediate cells increase during experimental malaria infection and are able to exhibit inhibitory activity against the parasite liver stage in vitro, J IMMUNOL, 164(3), 2000, pp. 1463-1469
Experimental infection of C57BL/6 mice by Plasmonium yoelii sporozoites ind
uced an increase of CD4(-)CD8(-) NK1.1(+) TCR alpha beta(int) cells and a d
own-regulation of CD4(+) NK1.1(+) TCR alpha beta(int) cells in the liver du
ring the acute phase of the infection. These cells showed an activated CD69
(+), CD122(+), CD44(high), and CD62L(high) surface phenotype. Analysis of t
he expressed TCRV beta segment repertoire revealed that most of the expande
d CD4-CD8- (double-negative) T cells presented a skewed TCRV beta repertoir
e and preferentially used V beta 2 and V beta 7 rather than vps, To get an
insight into the function of expanded NK1.1(+) T cells, experiments were de
signed in vitro to study their activity against P, yoelii liver stage devel
opment. P, yoelii-primed CD3(+) NK1.1(+) intrahepatic Lymphocytes inhibited
parasite growth within the hepatocyte. The antiplasmodial effector functio
n of the parasite-induced NK1.1(+) liver T cells was almost totally reverse
d with an anti-CD3 Ab, Moreover, IFN-gamma was in part involved in this ant
iparasite activity. These results suggest that up-regulation of CD4(-)CD8(-
) NK1.1(+) alpha beta T cells and down-regulation of CD4(+) NK1.1(+) TCR al
pha beta(int) cells may contribute to the early immune response induced by
the Plasmodium during the prime infection.