Type I natural killer T cells suppress tumors caused by p53 loss in mice

JB Swann, AP Uldrich, S Van Dommelen… - Blood, The Journal …, 2009 - ashpublications.org
JB Swann, AP Uldrich, S Van Dommelen, J Sharkey, WK Murray, DI Godfrey, MJ Smyth
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2009ashpublications.org
CD1d-restricted T cells are considered to play a host protective effect in tumor immunity, yet
the evidence for a role of natural killer T (NKT) cells in tumor immune surveillance has been
weak and data from several tumor models has suggested that some (type II) CD1d-restricted
T cells may also suppress some types of antitumor immune response. To substantiate an
important role for CD1d-restricted T cells in host response to cancer, we have evaluated
tumor development in p53+/− mice lacking either type I NKT cells (TCR Jα18−/−) or all CD1d …
Abstract
CD1d-restricted T cells are considered to play a host protective effect in tumor immunity, yet the evidence for a role of natural killer T (NKT) cells in tumor immune surveillance has been weak and data from several tumor models has suggested that some (type II) CD1d-restricted T cells may also suppress some types of antitumor immune response. To substantiate an important role for CD1d-restricted T cells in host response to cancer, we have evaluated tumor development in p53+/− mice lacking either type I NKT cells (TCR Jα18−/−) or all CD1d-restricted T cells (CD1d−/−). Our findings support a key role for type I NKT cells in suppressing the onset of sarcomas and hematopoietic cancers caused by p53 loss but do not suggest that other CD1d-restricted T cells are critical in regulating the same tumor development.
ashpublications.org