Natural Killer T-Cells Participate in Rejection of Islet Allografts in the Liver of Mice
- Atsushi Toyofuku12,
- Yohichi Yasunami1,
- Kentaroh Nabeyama1,
- Masahiko Nakano1,
- Masayuki Satoh1,
- Nobuhide Matsuoka1,
- Junko Ono3,
- Toshinori Nakayama4,
- Masaru Taniguchi5,
- Masao Tanaka2 and
- Seiyo Ikeda1
- 1Department of Surgery I, Fukuoka University, Fukuoka, Japan
- 2Department of Surgery and Oncology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
- 3Department of Laboratory Medicine, Fukuoka University, Fukuoka, Japan
- 4Department of Molecular Immunology, Graduate School of Medicine, Chiba University, Chiba, Japan
- 5Laboratory for Immune Regulation, Riken Research Center for Allergy and Immunology, Yokohama, Japan
- Address correspondence and reprint requests to Yohichi Yasunami, MD, Associate Professor, Department of Surgery I, Fukuoka University School of Medicine, 7-45-1, Nanakuma, Jonan-ku, Fukuoka 814-0180, Japan. E-mail: yasunami{at}fukuoka-u.ac.jp
Abstract
A role of natural killer T (NKT) cells in transplant rejection remains unknown. Here, we determined whether NKT cells participate in rejection of islet allografts, using NKT cell–deficient mice. Survival of islet allografts in streptozotocin-induced diabetic CD1d−/− mice or Vα14 NKT cell−/− mice was significantly prolonged without immunosuppression when grafted into the liver, but not beneath the kidney capsule, compared with wild-type mice. Acceptance of intrahepatic islet allografts was achieved in CD1d−/− mice by a subtherapeutic dose of rapamycin, which was abrogated in conjunction with the transfer of hepatic mononuclear cells from wild-type, but not from CD1d−/−, mice at islet transplantation. The second islet grafts from a donor-specific, but not from a third-party, strain in CD1d−/− mice bearing functional islet allografts were accepted without immunosuppression at 120 days after the initial transplantation. These findings demonstrate that NKT cells play a significant role in rejection of islet allografts in the liver of mice, but that NKT cells are not essential for induction of donor-specific unresponsiveness in this model. The current study indicates that NKT cells might be considered as a target for intervention to prevent islet allograft rejection when the liver is the site of transplantation.
- α-GalCer, α-galactosylceramide
- IFN-γ, γ-interferon
- IL, interleukin
- mAb, monoclonal antibody
- NKT, natural killer T
- STZ, streptozotocin
Footnotes
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- Accepted October 5, 2005.
- Received May 30, 2005.
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