Resistance of natural killer T cell-deficient mice to systemic Shwartzman reaction

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Abstract

The generalized Shwartzman reaction in mice which had been primed and challenged with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) depends on interleukin (IL)-12-induced interferon (IFN)-γ production at the priming stage. We examined the involvement in the priming mechanism of the unique population of Vα14 natural killer T (NKT) cells because they promptly produce IFN-γ after IL-12 stimulation. We report here that LPS- or IL-12-primed NKT cell genetically deficient mice were found to be resistant to LPS-elicited mortality. This outcome can be attributed to the reduction of IFN-γ production, because injection of recombinant mouse IFN-γ, but not injection oflL-12, effectively primed the NKT cell-deficient mice. However, priming with high doses of LPS caused mortality of severe combined immunodeficiency, NKT cell-deficient, and CD1-deficient mice, indicating a major contribution of NKT cells to the Shwartzman reaction elicited by low doses of LPS, whereas at higher doses of LPS NK cells play a prominent role. These results suggest that the numerically small NKT cell population of normal mice apparently plays a mandatory role in the priming stage of the generalized Shwartzman reaction.

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APA

Dieli, F., Sireci, G., Russo, D., Taniguchi, M., Ivanyi, J., Fernandez, C., … Salerno, A. (2000). Resistance of natural killer T cell-deficient mice to systemic Shwartzman reaction. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 192(11), 1645–1651. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.192.11.1645

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