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International Immunology Advance Access originally published online on April 13, 2004
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International Immunology, Vol. 16, No. 6, pp. 787-798, June 2004
© 2004 Japanese Society for Immunology

Contribution of CD1d-unrestricted hepatic DX5+ NKT cells to liver injury in Plasmodium berghei-parasitized erythrocyte-injected mice

Keishi Adachi1,5, Hiroko Tsutsui1,5, Ekihiro Seki2,5, Hiroki Nakano1,5, Kazuyoshi Takeda3, Ko Okumura3, Luc Van Kaer4 and Kenji Nakanishi1,5

1 Department of Immunology and Medical Zoology and 2 First Department of Surgery, Hyogo College of Medicine, Nishinomiya, Hyogo 663-8501, Japan, 3 Department of Immunology, Juntendo University, Tokyo 113-8431, Japan, 4 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt University, School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232, USA 5 Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Kawaguchi, Saitama 332-0012, Japan

Correspondence to: K. Nakanishi; E-mail: nakaken{at}hyo-med.ac.jp
Transmitting editor: M. Miyasaka

Inoculation with erythrocytes infected with Plasmodium berghei, a protozoan causing mouse lethal malaria, induces liver injury in mice, although the parasite cannot invade host hepatocytes at this infectious stage. As previously reported, hepatic infiltrates participate in this liver injury by exerting their perforin-dependent killing action. Here, we have investigated the cellular mechanisms underlying P. berghei-induced incidental liver injury. Hepatic lymphocytes from P. berghei-infected mice killed normal hepatocytes, but not ConA-induced lymphoblasts. Furthermore, the hepatic lymphocytes from infected C57BL/6 mice displayed cytotoxicity against hepatocytes from C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice, indicating MHC-unrestricted hepatocytotoxicity by these hepatic lymphocytes. NK cells were not involved in this hepatocytotoxicity. However, DX5+ cells sorted from the liver of infected CD1d-deficient mice killed normal hepatocytes, indicating that CD1d-independent DX5+ T cells are the effector cells. The hepatocytotoxicity of these hepatic DX5+ T cells did not require TCR engagement. These findings indicate that hepatic CD1d-independent DX5+ T cells play a critical role in P. berghei-induced liver injury. Our studies may have general implications for tissue injuries that are caused by ‘bystander killing’ or other poorly defined cell-mediated killing mechanisms.

Keywords: cytotoxicity, malaria, bystander killing, hepatitis


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