Invariant NKT cells are CD1d-restricted T cells specific for glycolipid Ags. Their activation or transgenic enrichment abrogates the development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE).
Herein, we demonstrate that in NKT-enriched mice the protection from EAE is associated with the infiltration of NKT cells in the CNS and the local expression of CD1d. This indicates that the CNS acquires the potential for local glycolipid presentation when exposed to inflammatory stress, permitting the triggering of NKT cells.
To address the importance of CD1d-mediated Ag presentation, we used transgenic mice that express CD1d solely in the thymus. Interestingly, enrichment of NKT cells in these mice also conferred resistance to EAE, with an efficacy indistinguishable from that of NKT-enriched CD1d-sufficient mice.
This protection was due to an abrogation of the encephalitogenic Th1 and Th17 response in the spleen, revealing that endogenous glycolipid presentation is dispensable for the regulatory function of NKT cells in EAE. Moreover, abrogating extrathymic CD1d expression failed to affect both the recruitment of NKT cells and their effector phenotype.
CNS-infiltrating NKT cells were characterized by a cytotoxic IFN-gamma(high)IL-4(low)IL-10(low)granzyme B(high) profile, irrespective of the local expression of CD1d. Glycolipid Ag presentation is therefore dispensable for the control of autoimmune demyelination by NKT cells, underlining the importance of alternative cognate and/or soluble factors in the control of NKT cell function.