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Development and function of invariant natural killer T cells producing T(h)2- and T(h)17-cytokines
Authors:Watarai Hiroshi  Sekine-Kondo Etsuko  Shigeura Tomokuni  Motomura Yasutaka  Yasuda Takuwa  Satoh Rumi  Yoshida Hisahiro  Kubo Masato  Kawamoto Hiroshi  Koseki Haruhiko  Taniguchi Masaru
Institution:Laboratory for Immune Regulation, RIKEN Research Center for Allergy and Immunology, Kanagawa, Japan. hwatarai@rcai.riken.jp
Abstract:There is heterogeneity in invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells based on the expression of CD4 and the IL-17 receptor B (IL-17RB), a receptor for IL-25 which is a key factor in TH2 immunity. However, the development pathway and precise function of these iNKT cell subtypes remain unknown. IL-17RB+ iNKT cells are present in the thymic CD44+/? NK1.1? population and develop normally even in the absence of IL-15, which is required for maturation and homeostasis of IL-17RB? iNKT cells producing IFN-γ. These results suggest that iNKT cells contain at least two subtypes, IL-17RB+ and IL-17RB? subsets. The IL-17RB+ iNKT subtypes can be further divided into two subtypes on the basis of CD4 expression both in the thymus and in the periphery. CD4+ IL-17RB+ iNKT cells produce TH2 (IL-13), TH9 (IL-9 and IL-10), and TH17 (IL-17A and IL-22) cytokines in response to IL-25 in an E4BP4-dependent fashion, whereas CD4? IL-17RB+ iNKT cells are a retinoic acid receptor-related orphan receptor (ROR)γt+ subset producing TH17 cytokines upon stimulation with IL-23 in an E4BP4-independent fashion. These IL-17RB+ iNKT cell subtypes are abundantly present in the lung in the steady state and mediate the pathogenesis in virus-induced airway hyperreactivity (AHR). In this study we demonstrated that the IL-17RB+ iNKT cell subsets develop distinct from classical iNKT cell developmental stages in the thymus and play important roles in the pathogenesis of airway diseases.
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