- Murray, Mallory;
- Crosby, Catherine;
- Marcovecchio, Paola;
- Hartmann, Nadine;
- Chandra, Shilpi;
- Zhao, Meng;
- Khurana, Archana;
- Zahner, Sonja;
- Clausen, Björn;
- Coleman, Fadie;
- Mizgerd, Joseph;
- Mikulski, Zbigniew;
- Kronenberg, Mitchell
Innate-like T cells, including invariant natural killer T cells, mucosal-associated invariant T cells, and γδ T cells, are present in various barrier tissues, including the lung, where they carry out protective responses during infections. Here, we investigate their roles during pulmonary pneumococcal infection. Following infection, innate-like T cells rapidly increase in lung tissue, in part through recruitment, but T cell antigen receptor activation and cytokine production occur mostly in interleukin-17-producing NKT17 and γδ T cells. NKT17 cells are preferentially located within lung tissue prior to infection, as are CD103+ dendritic cells, which are important both for antigen presentation to NKT17 cells and γδ T cell activation. Whereas interleukin-17-producing γδ T cells are numerous, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor is exclusive to NKT17 cells and is required for optimal protection. These studies demonstrate how particular cellular interactions and responses of functional subsets of innate-like T cells contribute to protection from pathogenic lung infection.