Signal regulatory protein alpha (SIRPalpha) and its cognate ligand CD47 have been documented to have a broad range of cellular functions in development and immunity. Here, we investigated the role of SIRPalpha-CD47 signalling in invariant NKT (iNKT) cell responses. We found that CD47 was required for the optimal production of IFN-gamma from splenic iNKT cells following exposure to the alphaGalCer analogue PBS-57 and in vivo infection of mice with Leishmania donovani. Surprisingly, although SIRPalpha was undetectable in the liver of uninfected mice, the hepatic iNKT-cell response to infection was also impaired in CD47-/- mice. However, we found that SIRPalpha was rapidly induced on Kupffer cells following L. donovani infection, via a mechanism involving G-protein-coupled receptors. Thus, we describe a novel amplification pathway affecting cytokine production by hepatic iNKT cells, which may facilitate the breakdown of hepatic tolerance after infection.