Socs1 Regulates Type I/Type Ii Nkt Cell Balance By Regulating Ifn Gamma Signaling

INTERNATIONAL IMMUNOLOGY(2011)

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Abstract
Suppressor of cytokine signaling-1 (SOCS1) has been shown to be an essential negative regulator of cytokine responses, including those of IFN gamma, IL-2, IL-4 and IL-7. SOCS1 deficiency resulted in hyperactivation not only of T cells in general but also of NKT cells specifically. Consistent with previous reports, T- and NKT-cell-specific deletion of Socs1 in mice resulted in enhanced sensitivity to ConA-induced hepatitis. Compared with wild-type (WT) NKT cells, SOCS1-deficient NKT cells produced larger quantities of IFN gamma in response to ConA and proliferated faster in response to IL-2 and IL-15. To our surprise, however, SOCS1-deficient NKT cells did not respond to the synthetic glycolipid ligand alpha-galactosylceramide (alpha-GalCer), though they did respond to sulfatide. alpha-GalCer-CD1d-tetramer-positive type I NKT [invariant NKT (iNKT)] cells were marginally detected in the periphery of SOCS1-conditional knockout (cKO) mice, suggesting that most of the SOCS1-deficient NKT cells at the periphery were type II NKT cells. Consistently, invariant V alpha 14 expression was much lower in SOCS1-deficient NKT cells than in WT NKT cells, indicating that iNKT cell homeostasis was abnormal in SOCS1-cKO mice. This reduction in iNKT cells was not observed in mice of an IFN gamma-deficient background. These results suggest that SOCS1 is an important regulator of the balance between type I and type II NKT cells at the periphery.
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Key words
alpha-GalCer, IFN gamma, NKT, SOCS, sulfatide
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