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ARTICLE |
CORRESPONDENCE Irina Caminschi: caminschi{at}wehi.edu.au
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-chain–null (Rag2–/–Il2rg–/–) mice. When cultured with IL-15 and -18, IKDCs proliferated extensively, like NK cells. Under these conditions, a proportion of expanded IKDCs and NK cells expressed high levels of surface MHC class II. However, even such MHC class II+ IKDCs and NK cells induced poor T cell proliferative responses compared with DCs. Thus, IKDCs resemble NK cells functionally, and neither cell type could be induced to be effective antigen-presenting cells.
DCs are professional APCs that activate naive T cells, and thereby control the initiation of adaptive immune responses (1, 2). Several types of DC, varying in hematopoietic origin, surface phenotype, and function, have been described (3, 4). The two major groups are the CD11cintCD45R+ plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs), which are characterized by their high capacity to secrete type I IFN (5), and the CD11chighCD45R– conventional DCs (cDCs), which play major roles in T cell priming (6, 7). One recently described DC type is the IFN-producing killer DC (IKDC), which has been proposed to provide a link between innate and adaptive immune responses (8, 9). IKDCs resemble cells of the innate immune system by lysing NK cell targets and producing large amounts of IFN-
In the studies proposing a dual function (8, 9), the IKDCs were initially found to express intermediate levels of the DC marker CD11c, to express CD45R like pDCs and NK cells, and to express CD49b like NK cells, but to have low surface MHC class II expression. We have identified cells with this surface phenotype and isolated them from our DC preparations, as well as from the total spleen population. The IKDCs that we isolated were immediately capable of killing NK cell targets, but in response to CpG and a range of other stimuli, failed to up-regulate MHC class II and failed to efficiently activate naive T cells. In terms of developmental requirements and functional capacity, the IKDCs that we isolated resembled NK cells rather than DCs. Importantly, we show that mouse IKDCs and NK cells proliferated, and a proportion up-regulated MHC class II molecules upon exposure to IL-15 and -18 in cell culture, in this respect aligning mouse and human NK cell biology; however, both cell types in our hands remained poor activators of naive T cells.
(8–10), although in contrast with previous reports we recently found they do not produce IFN-
(10). Upon activation, IKDCs have been claimed to up-regulate MHC class II and acquire the ability to present antigen-like cDCs, thereby directing adaptive T cell responses (9). Related hybrid cells have been previously described in mice (11, 12), rats (13–15), and humans (16–18), and although the phenotypic definition varies between reports, dual function remains the central theme. In humans, the converse situation of NK cells that behave like DCs has been demonstrated; human NK cells have been shown on activation to express MHC class II, and then to process and present antigen to T cells (19–21). Such conversion of NK cells into APCs has not been demonstrated in mice (22).
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RESULTS
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ABSTRACT
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
REFERENCES
Surface phenotype analysis
IKDCs have been defined as cells that are similar to pDCs in that they express CD45R (B220) and intermediate levels of CD11c, but unlike pDCs, they also express CD49b (DX5) and NK1.1 (8, 9). Using our DC isolation procedure that enriches for splenic pDCs and cDCs (Fig. 1 A), we noted that a proportion of cells expressed CD49b (Fig. 1 B). These CD49b+ cells expressed variable levels of CD45R (and CD45RA; not depicted), ranging from undetectable to high (Fig. 1 C). Furthermore, the majority of CD49b+ cells expressed low to intermediate levels of CD11c, although a small proportion were CD11chi (Fig. 1 C). The subpopulation of the CD49b+ cells that were CD11cintCD45R+ therefore matched the description of IKDCs (Fig. 1 C). Additionally, there appeared to be another minor population of CD49b+ cells that expressed high levels of CD11c and MHC class II, like cDCs; we termed these CD49b+DCs. Further analysis showed that these IKDCs and NK cells, but not CD49b+cDCs, pDCs, or cDCs, expressed NKG2D and NK1.1 (Fig. 1 D). The freshly isolated IKDCs expressed only low levels of MHC class II (Fig. 1 D), as previously reported (9). However, the level appeared a little lower than in the earlier study, which may reflect differences in reagents and staining strategies, or differences in the IKDC isolation procedures.
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, IL-4, and poly I:C), but all failed to enhance MHC class II levels on IKDC (not depicted).
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T cell stimulatory capacity of total spleen IKDCs
It was possible our failure to activate IKDCs to become APCs was because we had isolated an IKDC population that was different from that of Chan et al. (9), despite the similarities in the isolation procedure. One difference was that, when depleting our DC preparations of lymphoid cells, we normally include several mAbs for maximum purity, including anti-CD90 (Thy1.1; T24/31.7), which Chan et al. (9) did not. Indeed, we found that
50% of IKDCs expressed CD90, and that some of these were likely removed from our IKDC sample. However, when CD90 depletion was omitted, the resulting IKDCs in our DC preparations still failed to become effective APCs on activation with CpG (Fig. S2 B and Fig. S4 A, available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20071351/DC1). We also followed the Chan et al. (9) procedure in using only anti-CD3 and -CD19 as depletion mAbs, but the IKDCs again failed to become effective APCs (Fig. S4 B). We also noted that some cells with the IKDC surface phenotype were denser than the 1.077 g/cm3 used in this study and by Chan et al. (9) to enrich DCs, although all IKDCs appeared less dense than 1.082 g/cm3. To ensure we recovered all spleen cells with the surface phenotype of IKDCs, we isolated IKDCs using a much denser cut, which recovered all spleen-viable cells (eliminating only erythrocytes and dead cells), as well as omitting anti-Thy1.1 mAb from the depletion mix. However, this "total" IKDC fraction likewise failed to acquire APC function on culture with CpG (Fig. S4 C). We concluded that the behavior of the IKDCs in our DC-enriched preparations reflected that of the total IKDC population.
Absence of IKDC in Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice
The efficient lytic function of IKDC, but poor capacity to present antigen to naive T cells, suggested that IKDCs were a type of NK cell rather than a subtype of DCs. One important argument against this conclusion was the reported presence of IKDCs in recombinase-activating gene-2 null, common
-chain null (Rag2–/–Il2rg–/–) mice, which are deficient in NK cells (8, 25). Therefore, we reexamined this issue. We found that a major complication in the analysis of Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mouse spleen is the high frequency of autofluorescent cells, which can generate false positives in the analysis of rare DC populations (10). Thus, particular care was taken to exclude autofluorescent cells and dead cells, and to avoid and gate out doublets and aggregates (Fig. 7 A). Using this approach, Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice were shown to have pDCs and cDCs (Fig. 7 B), albeit at reduced total numbers compared with wild-type B6 mice (Fig. 7 E). This reduction likely reflects the absence of B cells (26) and the smaller spleen size. Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mouse spleen appeared to contain some CD49b+ cells (Fig. 7 C), although this population differed from the CD49b+ cells seen in normal B6 mice (Fig. 7 C). As expected (25), there were virtually no CD49b+NK1.1+ NK cells in Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice (Fig. 7 D). To enumerate IKDC, we used two separate definitions. First, we gated for CD49b+CD11cintCD45R+ cells and found very few cells that had this phenotype (Fig. 7 C). Because even these may have been residual autofluorescent cells or other noise, we then used the more stringent definition that specifies IKDC to be NK1.1+, as well as CD49b+CD11cintCD45R+ (Fig. 7 D), and found that these cells were at extremely low levels in Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice (Fig. 7 E). Furthermore, the NK cell–sensitive targets RMA-S and RMA-S Rae-ß, which are killed in a perforin- and NKG2D-dependent manner (27), were growth suppressed (RMA-S) and rejected (RMA-S Rae-ß) in Rag–/– mice, but not eliminated in Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice, or in Rag–/– mice depleted of NK1.1+ cells (Fig. S5, available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20071351/DC1). This argues that the residual CD49b+ cells present in Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice are neither NK cells nor IKDCs, which have been shown to kill targets via NKG2D (8, 9). Our overall conclusion was that IKDCs, like NK cells, are at a very low level or absent from Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice.
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Because IKDCs resembled NK cells by function and many surface markers, we tested their response to NK cell growth factors. When our IKDCs were cultured in the presence of IL-15 and -18, they proliferated extensively, like NK cells, whereas DCs did not (Fig. 9 A). Interestingly, a proportion of these expanded IKDCs then expressed surface MHC class II (Fig. 9 B). Importantly, a small proportion of expanded NK cells also expressed MHC class II (Fig. 9 B); this proportion was up to 25% under some culture conditions (Fig. S7, available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20071351/DC1). The emerging MHC class II+ cells are unlikely to represent a contaminating DC population because: (a) DCs do not proliferate under these conditions (Fig. 9 A), and (b) the number of cells with up-regulated MHC class II was 10-fold higher than the total number of cells initially seeded into culture.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Despite the use of a range of DC activation stimuli (CpG, LPS, poly I:C, IL-4, and IFN-
), and the use of bcl-2 transgenic IKDCs to overcome cell death in culture, in our hands, the IKDCs failed to up-regulate MHC class II under normal conditions of DC activation and failed to activate naive antigen-specific T cells, even after incubation with synthetic peptide antigen, which is in contrast to an earlier work (9). Although much higher levels of peptide were used in the earlier study, we titrated and tested levels of peptide beyond that which saturated DC responses, demonstrating that IKDCs were 100–1,000-fold less efficient APCs than DCs. Several disease models that might have provided alternate maturation signals also failed to induce IKDCs to become APCs.
What then is the basis of the difference between our data and that of Chan et al. (9)? Although the experimental approach was similar, there remain some differences in procedures. Selection of different types of IKDCs seems unlikely to be the explanation because when we took care to isolate all spleen cells with the IKDC surface phenotype, they showed the same lack of T cell stimulation capacity as the IKDC in our DC preparations. Another possible difference is the additional use of a positive bead selection of CD11c+ cells by Chan et al. (9). This may have excluded some types of IKDCs, but the selected IKDCs should have been included in our total spleen IKDC preparation, which included all spleen CD11c+ cells. It may be that the beads introduced some additional signals or generated cell doublets between IKDCs and pDCs. However, overlap of their IKDC fraction with true APCs is a more likely explanation for the differences. One candidate contaminant is CD49b+DC. These cells express high levels of MHC class II, CD80, and CD86, and thus would be predicted to be potent APCs. It is notable that, in the B6 mice we mainly used, these CD49b+DCs were at a low level in the DC preparations, but their frequency varied in BALB/c DC preparations, on occasions reaching a 1:1 ratio with IKDC. Accordingly, they would be harder to exclude from the IKDC fraction. In addition, BALB/c mice lack the NK1.1 marker useful for distinguishing these two subpopulations. The developmental relationship between CD49b+DC and IKDC is not clear, but we obtained no transformation of IKDC to CD49b+DC on incubation with maturation factors such as CpG. However, it is possible that in culture, selective death of IKDCs could masquerade as transformation of one into the other, so giving the impression that IKDCs became effective APCs. A further possible contaminant which might lead to induced APC function is some residual pDC. We note that the IKDC fraction of Chan et al. (9) produced IFN-
on stimulation with CpG. Our recent study (10) suggests that pDCs, but not IKDCs, produce IFN-
under these conditions.
An alignment of IKDC with NK cells, rather than with DCs, was reinforced by our analysis of the expression of the hematopoietic transcription factor PU1. This factor is expressed at high levels in cDCs and at moderate levels in pDCs, but is not expressed on mature NK cells (28). Our IKDCs did not express PU.1, aligning their transcription factor expression pattern more closely with NK cells. Importantly, IKDC, like NK cells, are also dependent on the Id-2 transcription inhibitor, but unlike DCs, they do not express the transcription factor Spi-B (31). Therefore, both the cytokine signaling requirements and transcription factor expression profiles argue against a close association of IKDCs and DCs.
A compelling argument delineating IKDCs from NK cells had been the observation that IKDCs, like DCs, appeared to be present in Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice (8), whereas NK cells are absent (25). However, our analysis now suggests that IKDC cells were markedly reduced, if present at all, in such mice. One possible explanation for the discrepancy is the disproportionate number of autofluorescent cells in DC preparations from these mice, which may give the false-positive signals in the IKDC gates. Multiple markers are required to clearly delineate an IKDC population.
Responses to growth factors can clarify the lineage relationships between different cell types. In our hands IKDCs did not respond to the DC growth factor GM-CSF. Administration of Flt-3 ligand in vivo enhances DC numbers, and has been reported to increase a population of "NKDCs," a subset of which expresses CD45R, and so might be classed as an IKDC. However, our kinetic study of cultures of bone marrow with Flt-3 ligand, which efficiently generates both cDCs and pDCs, indicated that IKDCs were not produced. Secondary events of Flt-3 ligand administration may cause the elevation of IKDC numbers in vivo. Our GM-CSF and Flt-3 ligand culture results suggest IKDC are not responsive to DC growth factors. In contrast, IKDCs, like NK cells, but unlike DCs, proliferated vigorously in culture to IL-15 and -18.
Culture of IKDCs in IL-15 and -18 not only induced cell proliferation, but produced some cells expressing high levels of MHC class II. Importantly, a proportion of cultured NK cells showed a similarly high surface expression of MHC class II. To our knowledge, this is the first study of growth factors directly inducing MHC class II expression in mouse NK cells and provides some alignment with human NK cells, which express MHC class II upon activation (19–21). In addition, mouse NK cells and NKDCs can be induced to express MHC class II in vivo (32). These findings are in contrast to our inability to induce MHC class II by activation of IKDC with CpG and other DC stimuli in vitro. However, despite the induction of MHC class II, our culture-expanded IKDCs did not significantly up-regulate the costimulator molecules CD80 or CD86, and they still failed to induce naive T cell proliferation. They could not be classed as effective APCs.
In conclusion, in our studies, IKDCs resemble NK cells in their lytic function, and do not acquire the antigen-presenting functions of DCs even after activation. As we previously reported (10), they produce IFN
like NK cells, but do not produce IFN
like pDCs. Their transcription factor profile and response to cytokines resembles that of NK cells, not that of DCs. Their developmental relationship to NK cells is not entirely clear. They have the appearance of an activated form of NK cell, but one study (31) points to differences in early stages of development. In either case, IKDCs should be considered as a subtype of NK cells, rather than a subtype of DCs.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Cell lines and media.
YAC-1 and CHO-K1 cell lines were maintained in DME or RPMI-1640 containing 10% FCS, and then harvested during exponential growth phase for use in assays. Freshly isolated cells were cultured in DC culture medium (modified RPMI-1640 medium containing 10% FCS, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 10–4 M 2-mercaptoethanol). Where indicated, 50 ng/ml IL-18 (R&D Systems) and 50 ng/ml IL-15 (rhIL-15; R&D Systems) were added to DC culture medium.
Antibodies.
The following fluorochrome-conjugated mAbs were used: anti-CD11c (N418)-APC, -Cy5, or -FITC; anti-CD45RA (14.8) or anti-CD45R (CD45R; RA-6B2) -PE or -APC; anti-CD49b (DX5)-biotin or -FITC; anti-NK1.1 (PK136)-biotin or APC; anti-NKG2D (CX5-biotin); anti-MHC class II (M5/114)-FITC, PE, or Alexa Fluor 594. For biotin conjugates, streptavidin (SA)-PE, SA-Alexa Fluor 594, or SA-Cy7-Pe was used in the second-stage reaction (BD PharMingen). To assure comparative MHC class II staining, our M5/114 conjugates contained sufficient unconjugated mAb to saturate class II binding, but maintain bright staining on scale. In all staining procedures, blocking with rat Ig anti-Fc receptor mAb (2.4G2) was used to reduce nonspecific staining.
Isolation of DC, IKDC, and NK cells.
The isolation of DC subpopulations has been previously described (10, 33, 34). In brief, tissues were chopped, digested with collagenase and DNase at room temperature, and treated with EDTA. Low-density cells were enriched by density centrifugation (1.077 g/cm3 Nycodenz, mouse osmolarity). In some experiments, which were designed to select IKDCs from all viable nucleated spleen cells, spleen cells were centrifuged instead in 1.091 g/cm3 Nycodenz medium, eliminating only the pellet of dead cells and erythrocytes. Non–DC lineage cells were coated with mAbs (KT3-1.1, anti-CD3; T24/31.7, anti-Thy1; TER119, anti-erythrocytes; ID3, anti-CD19; and 1A8, anti-Ly6G or RB6-8C5, anti-Ly6C/G), and then removed using anti–rat Ig magnetic beads (BioMag beads; QIAGEN). Coating with RB6-8C5 mAb (anti-Gr-1) did not result in the depletion of pDCs (34). In some experiments, anti-Thy1.1 mAb was omitted from the depletion mix, and in others only anti-CD3 and -CD19 were used, without changing the IKDC functional results. Dead cells were stained with propidium iodide (PI) and gated out. Freshly isolated splenic DCs were fluorescent cell sorted based on the expression of CD11c, CD45RA (14.8), or CD45R (B220) and CD49b, into CD11chiCD45RA– (cDC), CD11cintCD45RA+CD49b– (pDC), and CD11intCD45RA+CD49b+ (IKDC) subsets. Splenic NK cells were isolated by chopping and enzymic digestion, as mentioned earlier in this section, and removing red and dead cells by density centrifugation (1.091 g/cm3 Nycodenz, mouse osmolarity). Other irrelevant cells were then coated with mAbs against MHC class II (M5/114), CD24 (M1/69), CD4 (GK1.5), and CD8 (53–6.7) and removed using anti–rat Ig magnetic beads. Remaining cells were stained with mAb against CD3
-PE (BD PharMingen), CD49b-FITC, and NK1.1-APC, and NK cells (CD49b+NK1.1+CD3–) were isolated to >99% purity by sorting. Depending on the fluorochromes used, sorting was performed on a DiVa instrument (Becton Dickinson), FACStar Plus (Becton Dickinson), or FACSAria (Becton Dickinson), but most commonly on a MoFlo instrument (DakoCytomation); the data generated with the sorted populations was consistent between instruments. Analysis was performed on LSR1 (Becton Dickinson), FACScan (Becton Dickinson), or FACStar Plus instruments.
Purification of transgenic T cells.
CL4 and HNT, OT-I, and OT-II transgenic T cells were isolated from lymph node cell suspensions by staining irrelevant cells with mAbs (anti-erythrocytes, TER-119; anti-Gr1, RB6-6C5; anti-Mac-1, M1/70; anti-class II MHC, M5/114; anti-F4/80, and anti-CD8, 53–6.7; or anti-CD4, GK1.5), and then removing these using anti–rat Ig–coupled magnetic beads at a 1:10 cell/bead ratio; purity was verified to be
95%.
CFSE-labeled T cell proliferation assays.
Purified T cells were washed once in 0.1% BSA PBS and resuspended at 107 cell/ml. 5 mM CFSE was added (1 µl/107 cells), and incubated at 37°C for 10 min. RPMI-1640 medium containing 2.5% FCS was added, and cells were washed twice. T cells (5 x 104 cells/well) were incubated with APCs (104 cells, or as otherwise stated) in U-bottomed 96-well plates in 200 µl DC culture medium. Where indicated, 10 ng/ml GM-CSF and 0.5 µM CpG 1668 were added. Graded doses (2–2,000 ng/ml) of MHC class II–specific OVA peptide (323–339) or whole OVA (0.5 mg/ml) were added to the cells. To enumerate T cells after culture, 2.5 x 104 calibration beads (BD Bioscience) were added per well, and T cells were visualized by staining with appropriate markers (OT-I or OT-II cells were stained with anti-TCR-V
2 mAb [B20.1-PE; BD PharMingen] and HNT or CL4 transgenic T cells were stained with anti-CD4 [GK1.5-APC] or anti-CD8 [53–6.7-APC], respectively). Dead cells were excluded using propidium iodide. Analysis was performed on a FACScan or FACSCalibur (Becton Dickinson). Proliferating T cells were identified by loss of CFSE fluorescence and enumerated relative to the beads, thus allowing a count of total proliferating T cells per well.
IKDC and DC activation/maturation.
Isolated DCs and IKDCs (up to 106 cells/ml) were cultured in U-bottomed 96-well plates for 18–44 h in DC culture medium with 10 ng/ml GM-CSF and 0.5 µM CpG-1668 (GeneWorks). The level of MHC class II expression by the various DC populations was assessed before and 1–2 d after activation.
51Chromium release lysis assay.
Purified effector cells were washed in DC culture medium to remove residual EDTA, and then plated in serial dilution in U-bottomed 96-well plates in medium with or without GM-CSF and CpG. Target cells (YAC-1 or CHO-K1-OVA) were harvested in exponential growth phase, washed, and resuspended in DC culture medium at 107/ml. 1 million target cells were incubated at 37°C for 1.5 h with 100 µl of sodium chromate (51Cr; 100 µCi). Labeled targets were washed 4 times and plated at 104 cells/well onto prediluted effector cells. Cells were centrifuged for 1 min at 335 g to facilitate cell–cell contact, and incubated for 4 h at 37°C. The plates were centrifuged (for 5 min at 400 g), and 100 µl of supernatant was removed and counted for 1 min for
emission. Spontaneous (S) chromium release was determined by incubating target cells in the absence of effectors, and maximum (M) cell lysis was obtained by exposing target cells to 10% Triton X-100. Specific lysis was calculated according to the following formula: percentage of lysis = 100 x (E – S)/(M – S), where E is the experimental chromium release. All effector/target cell ratios were conducted in duplicate or triplicate. The spontaneous chromium release was routinely <10%.
Influenza infection of APCs.
For in vitro infections, purified IKDCs, CD49b+DCs, pDCs, cDCs, and NK cells were incubated with 5 PFU/cell of PR8 influenza virus for 60 min at 37°C. Cells were washed three times, and then resuspended in culture media at 1.5 x 105 cells/ml. Graded doses of APC were incubated with 50,000 purified CFSE-labeled HNT or CL4 T cells, and after 60 h of coculture, proliferating T cells were enumerated.
Malaria infection of mice.
Mice were injected intraperitoneally with 106P. berghei ANKA-infected erythrocytes. Parasitemia was assessed from Giemsa-stained smears of tail blood prepared after 2–3 d. 3 d after infection, spleens were extracted, and DCs, IKDCs, and NK cells were isolated and purified by flow cytometry.
Generation of OVA-FLAG expressing CHO cells.
Flag-tagged, membrane-bound OVA (OVA-FLAG) protein was expressed on the surface of CHO cells as a C-terminal (extracellular) FLAG-tagged protein. To generate the FLAG–tagged proteins, OVA cDNA was amplified using Advantage high fidelity 2 polymerase (CLONTECH Laboratories, Inc.) and the primers 5'-TAGTAGATGGCGCGCCATGATCAAGCTAGATCAGCATTC-3' and 5'-TAGTAGACGCGTAGGGGAAACACATCTGCCAAA-3', using the previously described membrane-bound OVA (first 118 amino acids of transferrin receptor linked to amino acids 138–385 of OVA) (35) as a template. The amplified cDNA was restriction digested with AscI and Mlu-1 and subcloned into the AscI site of a pEF-Bos vector modified to contain the FLAG epitope (donated by T. Willson, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, Melbourne, Australia). CHO cells were cotransfected with the pEF-Bos-OVA-FLAG and a pGK-neo plasmid containing the neomycin phosphotransferase gene by electroporation (Gene Pulsar; Bio-Rad Laboratories) and transfectants selected with 1 mg/ml G418 (Geneticin; Life Technologies). OVA-FLAG–positive cells were stained with biotinylated anti-FLAG mAb 9H10 (36), followed by SA-PE, and then isolated by flow cytometric sorting.
Online supplemental material.
Fig. S1 shows that BALB/c IKDCs do not activate naive CD4 T cells. Fig. S2 shows that IKDCs preactivated with CpG did not acquire APC function. Fig. S3 shows that IKDCs accumulate in the spleens of mice infected with malaria. Fig. S4 shows that total spleen IKDCs do not activate naive T cells. Fig. S5 shows that parental and Rae-1ß–expressing RMA-S tumor cells are rejected by NK cells in Rag–/– mice, but not by cells in Rag2–/–Il2rg–/– mice. Fig. S6 shows that Flt3 ligand bone marrow cultures produce pDCs and cDCs, but not IKDCs. Fig. S7 shows that a proportion of purified NK cells cultured in IL-15 and -18 up-regulate MHC class II expression. There is also a Supplemental materials and methods section. The online version of this article is available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20071351/DC1.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council, Australia. I. Caminschi was supported by the Melbourne University Career Interruption Fellowship. S. Bedoui was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft BE 3285/1-1 and 1-2. K. Heger was supported by the Dr. Karl Wamsler Foundation and the German Academic Exchange Service. J.A. Villadangos is a Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Scholar. W.R. Heath is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute International Scholar.
The authors have no conflicting financial interests.
Submitted: 2 July 2007
Accepted: 24 September 2007
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