Abstract

CD1d presents glycolipid antigens such as α-galactosylceramide (αGalCer) to invariant natural killer T cells (iNKT). We have reported that activated iNKTs inhibit IL-10-producing autoreactive B cells, while promoting or leaving intact the normal B cell responses, making iNKT modulation an attractive therapeutic modality. Here, we report that a brief treatment of young lupus-prone (NZB/NZW)F1 (BWF1) mice with two injections of αGalCer conferred a long-term protection against lupus. Long-term repeated administrations of αGalCer, however, afforded no clinical benefit. These disparate clinical effects correlated with iNKT responsiveness. While a brief treatment with αGalCer enhanced iNKT responses upon in vitro recall, the long-term αGalCer treatment resulted in reduced iNKT responses in BWF1 mice. The improvement in disease with αGalCer treatment was associated with the reduced IL-10 production. Furthermore, iNKTs directly inhibited IL-10-secreting cells in vivo in reconstituted SCID mice and inhibited IL-10-secreting B cells in vitro in co-cultures. Thus, a brief treatment with a CD1d-binding glycolipid enhances iNKT responses, reduces IL-10 production, and delays the onset of lupus, whereas long-term repeated treatments induce marked iNKT hyporesponsiveness and do not affect disease outcome in BWF1 mice. Identifying glycolipid regimens that can modulate iNKT responsiveness will have important implications for developing iNKT-based therapies for autoimmune diseases.

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