Gut-derived bacterial products contribute to liver inflammation and injury during chronic hepatitis B virus infection;however,the underlying mechanisms remain obscure.In this study,hepatitis B surface antigen transgenic(HBs-Tg)mice and their wild-type(WT)control C57BL/6 mice were injected with CpG-oligodeoxynucleotides(ODNs)to mimic the translocation of gut microbial products into the systemic circulation.We found that,compared with the WT mice,the HBs-Tg mice were oversensitive to CpG-ODN-induced liver injury,which was dependent on natural killer T(NKT)cells.CpG-ODN injection enhanced the expression of Fas ligand(FasL)on NKT cells.In addition,hepatocytes from the HBs-Tg mice expressed higher levels of Fas than did those from the WT mice,which was further augmented by CpG-ODN.Interaction of Fas and FasL was involved in the cytotoxicity of NKT cells against hepatocytes in the HBs-Tg mice.Moreover,Kupffer cells in the HBs-Tg mice expressed higher levels of CD205 and produced greater amounts of interleukin(IL)-12 than did those in the WT mice.Finally,the depletion of Kupffer cells,neutralization of IL-12 or specific silencing of CD205 on Kupffer cells significantly inhibited CpG-ODN-induced liver injury and NKT activation in the HBs-Tg mice.Our data suggest that CD205-expressing Kupffer cells respond to CpG-ODNs and subsequently release IL-12 to promote NKT cell activation.Activated NKT cells induce liver damage through the Fas signaling pathway in HBs-Tg mice.