Abstract

Lipid antigens of Leishmania donovani-like lipophosphoglycans (LPG) are demonstrated to be a potent ligand for natural killer T (NKT) cell activation. Little is known about the phenotype or function of these cells and their trafficking pattern to the bone marrow (BM) of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) patients. Their precise role in humans still requires pathological validation. The study included 42 parasitologically confirmed patients (mean age 24.80 ± 16.26 years; range 3–70 years; 25 males and 17 females), 33 healthy contact subjects (family/non-family members) and normal BM specimens (NBM; n = 9). Enumeration of NKT cells and quantification of parasites (before and after therapy) were performed for the recruited patients. Results established that non-CD1d restricted, diverse cells are the dominant population among resident but not enriched NKT (CD3 +CD161 +) cells at the disease site (BM). Expression profiles for various markers are indicative of their early activated (CD69 +, CD62L low, CD11a high) CCR5 + phenotype at the BM. Functionally, BM-derived NKT cells were dominantly producing IFN-γ in response to L. donovani antigen in vitro. Given these observations, these data indicate that CD3 +CD161 + diverse NKT cells are heterogeneous in function and of the dominant Th-1 phenotype at the disease site.

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