Invariant NKT cells and CD1d(+) cells amass in human omentum and are depleted in patients with cancer and obesity

Type Article

Journal Article

Authors

L. Lynch; D. O'Shea; D. C. Winter; J. Geoghegan; D. G. Doherty; C. O'Farrelly

Year of publication

2009

Publication/Journal

Eur J Immunol

Volume

39

Issue

7

Pages

1893-901

Abstract

Invariant NKT (iNKT) cells recognize lipid antigens presented by CD1d and respond rapidly by killing tumor cells and release cytokines that activate and regulate adaptive immune responses. They are essential for tumor rejection in various mouse models, but clinical trials in humans involving iNKT cells have been less successful, partly due to their rarity in humans compared with mice. Here we describe an accumulation of functional iNKT cells in human omentum, a migratory organ with healing properties. Analysis of 39 omental samples revealed that T cells are the predominant lymphoid cell type and of these, 10% expressed the invariant Valpha24Jalpha18 TCR chain, found on iNKT cells, higher than in any other human organ tested to date. About 15% of omental hematopoietic cells expressed CD1d, compared with 1% in blood (p