The development of lymphoid organs requires membrane-bound lymphotoxin (LT), a heterotrimer containing LTα and LTβ, but the effects of LT on T cell function have not been characterized extensively. Upon TCR cross-linking in vitro, splenocytes from both LTα−/− and LTβ−/− mice failed to produce IL-4 and IL-10 due to a reduction in NK T cells. Concordantly, LTα−/− and LTβ−/− mice did not respond to the lipoglycan α-galactosylceramide, which is presented by mouse CD1 to Vα14+ NK T cells. Interestingly, both populations of NK T cells, including those that are mouse CD1 dependent and α-galactosylceramide reactive and those that are not, were affected by disruption of the LTα and LTβ genes. NK T cells were not affected, however, in transgenic mice in which LT signaling is blocked, beginning on day 3 after birth, by expression of a soluble decoy LTβ receptor. This suggests that membrane-bound LT is critical for NK T cells early in ontogeny, but not for the homeostasis of mature cells.
CITATION STYLE
Elewaut, D., Brossay, L., Santee, S. M., Naidenko, O. V., Burdin, N., De Winter, H., … Kronenberg, M. (2000). Membrane Lymphotoxin Is Required for the Development of Different Subpopulations of NK T Cells. The Journal of Immunology, 165(2), 671–679. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.165.2.671
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