Immune suppression and skin cancer development: regulation by NKT cells

AM Moodycliffe, D Nghiem, G Clydesdale… - Nature …, 2000 - nature.com
AM Moodycliffe, D Nghiem, G Clydesdale, SE Ullrich
Nature immunology, 2000nature.com
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is carcinogenic and immunosuppressive. UV-induced immune
suppression is mediated by antigen-specific T cells, which can transfer suppression to
normal recipients. These cells are essential for controlling skin cancer development in the
UV-irradiated host and in suppressing other immune responses, such as delayed-type
hypersensitivity. Despite their importance in skin cancer development, their exact identity
has remained elusive. We show here that natural killer T cells from UV-irradiated donor mice …
Abstract
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is carcinogenic and immunosuppressive. UV-induced immune suppression is mediated by antigen-specific T cells, which can transfer suppression to normal recipients. These cells are essential for controlling skin cancer development in the UV-irradiated host and in suppressing other immune responses, such as delayed-type hypersensitivity. Despite their importance in skin cancer development, their exact identity has remained elusive. We show here that natural killer T cells from UV-irradiated donor mice function as suppressor T cells and play a critical role in regulating the growth of UV-induced skin cancers and suppressing adaptive immune responses in vivo.
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