Abstract

Severe liver injury that occurs when immune cells mistakenly attack an individual's own liver cells leads to autoimmune hepatitis. In mice, acute hepatitis can be induced by concanavalin A (ConA) treatment, which causes rapid activation of CD1d-positive natural killer (NK) T cells. These activated NKT cells produce large amounts of cytokines, which induce strong inflammation that damages liver tissues. Here we show that PKC-θ−/− mice were resistant to ConA-induced hepatitis due to essential function of PKC-θ in NKT cell development and activation. A dosage of ConA (25 mg/kg) that was lethal to wild-type (WT) mice failed to induce death resulting from liver injury in PKC-θ−/− mice. Correspondingly, ConA-induced production of cytokines such as IFNγ, IL-6, and TNFα, which mediate the inflammation responsible for liver injury, were significantly lower in PKC-θ−/− mice. Peripheral NKT cells had developmental defects at early stages in the thymus in PKC-θ−/− mice, and as a result their frequency and number were greatly reduced. Furthermore, PKC-θ−/− bone marrow adoptively transferred to WT mice displayed similar defects in NKT cell development, suggesting an intrinsic requirement for PKC-θ in NKT cell development. In addition, upon stimulation with NKT cell-specific lipid ligand, peripheral PKC-θ−/− NKT cells produced lower levels of inflammatory cytokines than that of WT NKT cells, suggesting that activation of NKT cells also requires PKC-θ. Our results suggest PKC-θ is an essential molecule required for activation of NKT cell to induce hepatitis, and thus, is a potential drug target for prevention of autoimmune hepatitis.

Highlights

  • Mistaken attack of healthy liver cells by an individual’s own immune system causes severe liver damage, leading to autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) [1]

  • A widely used murine AIH model is that caused by concanavalin A (ConA) treatment, which rapidly induces severe immune-mediated hepatitis due to activation of a specific population of T cells, natural killer (NK) T cells, that are enriched in liver [2]

  • PKC-h2/2 mice are resistant to ConA-induced hepatitis To determine the function of PKC-h in liver injury, we used an acute hepatitis murine model that depends on ConA-mediated activation of NKT cells [31]

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Summary

Introduction

Mistaken attack of healthy liver cells by an individual’s own immune system causes severe liver damage, leading to autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) [1]. A widely used murine AIH model is that caused by concanavalin A (ConA) treatment, which rapidly induces severe immune-mediated hepatitis due to activation of a specific population of T cells, natural killer (NK) T cells, that are enriched in liver [2]. Fas/FasL-mediated apoptosis appears to be an important mechanism for liver damage, as NKT cells from Fas-mutant gld/gld mice fail to induce hepatitis [5,6]. ConA can activate other T cells, NKT cells are required and sufficient for induction of liver damage in this murine AIH model [7]. Critical TCR signaling molecules are potential drug targets for treatment of hepatitis; little is known about the signaling molecules required for activation of NKT

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