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1.
Normal human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) express several in vitro cytotoxic functions, among which are natural killer (NK), antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), and lectin-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (LDCC). The relationship of these various cytotoxic functions and the identity of cells involved has been a subject of controversy. Recently it was reported that NK and K for ADCC can be mediated by the same cell, suggesting that they constitute in large part a single subpopulation with multiple cytotoxic functions. The ability of this NK/K effector cell to mediate LDCC was examined here using the two target conjugate assay. The effector cells were Ficoll-Hypaque PBL or LGL-enriched fractions. The targets used were K562 or MOLT for NK, RAJI coated with antibody for ADCC, and RAJI coated with PHA or Con A or modified by NaIO4 for LDCC. In the two-target conjugate assay, one of the targets is fluorescein labeled for identification. The results show that (a) LDCC copurifies with NK/K and is enriched in the LGL fraction, as measured in both the 51Cr-release assay and the single-cell assay for cytotoxicity; (b) single effector cells simultaneously bind to NK or ADCC and LDCC targets, revealing that single cells bear binding receptors for all targets; and (c) single lymphocytes were not able to kill both bound NK/K and LDCC targets. However, significant two-target killing was obtained when both targets were NK targets, ADCC targets, LDCC targets, or one NK and one ADCC target. These results demonstrate that the NK and LDCC effector cells are distinct subpopulations copurified in the LGL fraction. In addition, the results show that lectin is unable to trigger globally an NK effector cell to mediate cytotoxicity against a bound NK insensitive target. Thus, although both NK and LDCC effector cells are present in the LGL fraction and can bind to both types of targets, the trigger of the lethal hit event is the function of specialized effector cells.  相似文献   

2.
Spleen cells from LSH hamsters inoculated with xenogeneic, allogeneic, or syngeneic (PARA-7) tumor cells were assayed for their ability to mediate direct cell-mediated cytotoxicity (DCMC) and lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC) in a 4-hr chromium release assay. Spleen cells from animals immune to xenogeneic or allogeneic cells demonstrated specific DCMC against homologous target cells in the absence of Con A and nonspecific LDCC against both homologous and heterologous target cells in the presence of Con A. Spleen cells from animals bearing syngeneic PARA-7 tumors (TBA) failed to express DCMC against homologous or heterologous target cells; however, significant lysis of all target cells occurred in the presence of Con A. LDCC was not detectable when nonsensitized spleen cells from normal animals were employed. The LDCC reaction was dependent on the concentration of Con A and the number of effector cells present in the reaction. The development of LDCC effector cells in the TBA appeared to parallel the development of both DCMC and LDCC effector cells in immune animals.  相似文献   

3.
Alloimmune mouse spleen cells are capable of carrying out nonspecific cell-mediated cytolysis of syngeneic target cells when incubated in the presence of lectins such as Con A or PHA (lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity). In the present study plant lectins from a variety of sources were examined for their ability to participate in alloimmune-LDCC. Reactivity was then compared to mitogenic activity and the ability to activate cytotoxic effector cells in vitro. Of the lectins tested only those reported to be T-cell mitogens were capable of participating in alloimmune-LDCC. Agglutinating but nonmitogenic lectins (e.g., WGA) or mitogens such as LPS or PWM failed to yield positive LDCC. Of the T-cell mitogens demonstrating positive reactivity in the alloimmune-LDCC assay, only a portion were able to generate cytolytic activity when incubated with normal spleen cells in vitro (Con A, GPA, lentil). Crude PHA, purified erythroagglutinin, or leukagglutinin failed to generate cytotoxic effector cells in this system even though these were mitogenic and demonstrated positive alloimmune-LDCC. The results suggest that T-cell mitogens interact with cytotoxic effector cells in a manner which specifically triggers cytolysis. The relationship of this interaction to other lymphocyte-lectin interactions is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The role of OKT4+ and OKT8+ T-cell subsets was studied in lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC) against adherent HEp-2 human epipharynx carcinoma target cells. LDCC was evaluated by detachment from the monolayer of [3H]thymidine prelabeled HEp-2 cells in a 24-hr assay with a concanavalin A (Con A) dose of 25 microgram/ml at effector:target cell ratios of 5:1, 25:1, and 50:1. Under these conditions but without Con A considerable natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity (NCMC) was not elicited; however, the cytotoxicity was significantly augmented in the presence of Con A (=LDCC) by sheep erythrocyte rosette-forming T lymphocytes and by both OKT4+ and OKT8+ T-cell fractions. LDCC activity by isolated OKT8+ T cells was superior to that by OKT4+ T cells and unfractionated T lymphocytes. By contrast, addition of either OKT4+ or OKT8+ T cells together with unfractionated T lymphocytes, or OKT4+ and OKT8+ T cells mixed at ratios of 1:1, 1:2, and 2:1, to target cells did not result in major differences in comparison of LDCC activities by these mixed effector cell populations with each other or with that by unfractionated T lymphocytes. Parallel studies were carried out to determine the effect of OKT4+ and OKT8+ T-cell subsets on the Con A-induced proliferation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). While OKT8+ T cells inhibited the mitogenic response to Con A, OKT4+ T lymphocytes had no major effect. A higher responsiveness of the OKT8+ to OKT4+ T-cell subset in LDCC to HEp-2 targets and in Con A-induced lymphocyte proliferation is suggested.  相似文献   

5.
Alloimmunization (C57BL/6, anti-P815) can result in the development of cytolytic effector cells capable of mediating direct antigen-specific, cell-mediated cytotoxicity (DCMC) and nonspecific lectin-dependent, cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC). The induction of DCMC appeared to require challenge with large numbers (108) of viable replicating P815 cells, whereas LDCC reactivity was obtained following challenge with high or low (104) numbers of replicating or mitomycin C-treated P815 cells. Other alloantigen preparations, e.g., soluble antigen or membrane preparations, failed to induce DCMC or LDCC. An examination of the effects of high- and low-dose challenge using viable P815 cells demonstrated that high-dose challenge resulted in strong DCMC, LDCC, a readily detectable humoral response, and some delayed-type hypersensitivity, whereas low-dose challenge yielded LDCC, strong delayed-type hypersensitivity, and suppressor cell activity. The development of DCMC was severely suppressed in animals primed with a low-dose P815 challenge and subsequently rechallenged with 108 P815. Further development of LDCC was similarly suppressed. It appears that although both DCMC and LDCC effector cells are susceptible to previously activated suppression, during a primary in vivo response a portion of the LDCC effector cells develop beyond a critical stage before suppression is expressed.  相似文献   

6.
In an attempt to characterize the “activation” signal delivered by concanavalin A (Con A) in lectin-dependent T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC), we attempted to determine whether there was a need for the intracellular localization of lectin within the effector cell. To preclude such internalization, Con A was insolubilized by coupling to Sepharose and was then tested for its ability to support LDCC. We found that all the preparations of Con A-Sepharose tested were effective in supporting cytolysis, suggesting that the “activation” signal for lysis could be delivered solely at the level of the effector cell membrane. Furthermore, in contrast to previous reports, we found that insolubilized Con A was mitogenic for T-cell populations.  相似文献   

7.
Spleen cells from C57BL/6 (H-2b) mice were assayed for their ability to mediate lectin-dependent (Con A, PHA) cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC), following immunization with erythrocytes, bovine serum albumin, Bacillus Calmette Guerin, and allogeneic (H-2d) P815 cells. Sensitization with viable, but not formaldehyde-fixed, P815 cells resulted in lectin-dependent lysis of syngeneic EL-4 cells. All other sensitization procedures failed to produce LDCC. Spleen cells from mice challenged with high (108) doses of P815 cells were capable of mediating both direct (anti-P815) cytotoxicity and LDCC, while challenge with low (104) doses of P815 cells produced strong LDCC reactivity in the apparent absence of direct cytotoxicity (DCMC). Characterization of the effector cells indicated that LDCC reactivity was mediated by an activated, non-adherent T cell population. The effector cells appear to be unique in that LDCC could be induced in the absence of DCMC, LDCC activity appeared prior to DCMC, and DCMC could be removed by adsorption on P815 monolayers without depleting LDCC reactivity.  相似文献   

8.
Single cell cytotoxicity assays reveal that a large percentage of lymphocytes are unable to kill attached targets in a 4- to 18-hr assay. Additional signals (in the form of lectin or anti-target antibody) delivered to target-bound lymphocytes enable these previously non-lytic lymphocytes to kill attached target cells. This finding was obtained by using a modification of the single cell assay, in which lectin or target cell antibody is incorporated into agarose with preformed lymphocyte-target conjugates. Human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) or Percoll density gradient-enriched large granular lymphocytes (LGL) were used as effector cells in natural killer (NK), antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (LDCC) assay systems. The targets used were NK-sensitive K562 and Molt-4 and NK-insensitive Raji. Several findings were made in the modified single cell assay, namely a) the frequency of cytotoxic NK or ADCC effector cells was not augmented, suggesting that the initial trigger was sufficient for lytic expression in these instances. Furthermore, these results showed that the NK-sensitive targets used do not bind nonspecifically to the LDCC effector cells. K562 coated with Con A, however, serve as LDCC targets. b) The frequency of two target conjugate lysis by NK/K effectors was not augmented by Con A. These results suggest that Con A does not potentiate the killing of multiple targets bound to a single cytotoxic lymphocyte. c) Although conjugates formed between LGL or PBL and NK-insensitive Raji are non-lethal, significant lysis was observed when these conjugates were suspended in Con A or antibody agarose. These results demonstrate that Raji bind to cytotoxic NK, K, and LDCC effector cells, but are lysed only when the appropriate trigger is provided. d) The cytotoxic potential of non-lytic conjugates appears to lie within the low density Percoll fraction, although the high density lymphocytes are able to nonlethally bind to targets. Altogether the results demonstrate that target recognition and/or binding by the effector cells is a distinct event from the trigger or lytic process. The implications of these findings are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Spleen cell killing of target cells can manifest through spleen cell-target cell interaction in the presence of mitogenic lectin, lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC). Spleen cells from C57B1/6 mice immunized with C3H mouse cells were found to be capable of cytotoxicity against autologous and other C57B1/6 spleen cells in the presence of Con A. Thus, alloimmune spleen cells are capable of an anti-self cytotoxic response in the presence of mitogenic lectin, antiautologous LDCC. Antiautologous LDCC is blocked by preincubation of cytotoxic cells with colchicine, an inhibitor of the cytotoxic effector mechanism. Analysis of alloimmune spleen cell subpopulations suggests that the antiautologous LDCC cell is an immature alloimmune cytotoxic cell (prekiller cell). Potent LDCC was found in alloimmune spleen cell preparations depleted of alloimmune cytotoxic T cells (killer-depleted) by three passes on allogeneic cell monolayers genetically identical with the immunizing cell. However, some LDCC effectors were also found to adhere to the adsorbing target, suggesting that there is some maturational diversity among LDCC effectors.  相似文献   

10.
Human lectin-dependent T cell-mediated cytotoxicity against Hep-2 cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A sensitive method for human lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC) is presented using HEp-2 adherent human epipharynx carcinoma cells as targets. Cytotoxicity was evaluated by detachment from the monolayer of 3H-TdR-prelabelled HEp-2 cells. Maximal LDCC was obtained in a 24 h assay with a Con A dose of 25 micrograms/ml for 50 : 1 effector-target cell ratio requiring only 2500 target cells per well. Testing of five different lymphocyte fractions: peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), monocyte-enriched adherent cells (AC), monocyte-depleted non-adherent cells (non-AC), T and non-T lymphocytes as effector cells from 25 normal individuals, suggests that LDCC to HEp-2 targets is mediated by T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

11.
The exquisite immunological specificity of cytotoxic T lymphocytes-target cell (CTL-TC) conjugation and lysis is overridden in the presence of certain plant lectins. The role of concanavalin A (Con A) in lectin-dependent, CTL-mediated cytolysis (LDCC) has been investigated. Papain-treated TC are refractory to LDCC, but regain susceptibility following a 3-hr incubation without the enzyme. Papain-treated TC allowed to recover in the presence of tunicamycin (TM; an inhibitor of N-linked glycosylation), are totally refractory to LDCC. Refractoriness of TM-treated TC to LDCC is not due to an overall resistance to lysis or to lack of Con A binding, as these cells can be lysed by specifically sensitized CTL or by H-2 antibody and complement and display a sufficiently high Con A-binding capacity, indistinguishable from intact TC, probably through O-linked, cell-surface glycosyl residues. The finding that TC (TM-treated) capable of binding normal Con A quantities cannot, however, engage in lectin-dependent CTL-TC conjugation and lysis indicates that Con A must react selectively with a specific TC-surface component(s), thereby rendering the TC recognizable by effector CTL, rather than by simply bridging ("glueing") CTL and TC. Affinity absorption and elution from Sepharose-Con A beads as well as specific immunoprecipitations by antibodies against cell surface determinants, have shown effective Con A binding to TC surface components of molecular weights corresponding to 45-kDa product of the H-2K and D MHC genes and, possibly, to a 30-kDa component. Antibodies against MHC proteins but not against non-MHC surface proteins of the TC have produced effective inhibition of LDCC. This and previous investigations show that in nonspecific LDCC as in specific CTL-mediated lysis, TC-MHC determinants are involved in signaling TC recognition and lysis.  相似文献   

12.
The capacity of several types of cell preparations to induce in vivo a state of memory for a secondary in vitro cytotoxic response against non-major-histocompatibility antigen was markedly reduced (on a per cell basis) by uv-irradiation. This indicated that memory induction requires metabolically active stimulator cells. An “adherent cell preparation” (AC) that was enriched for dendritic cells was among the most effective memory-inducing cell populations; but concanavalin A-activated nylon-wool-nonadherent spleen cells (Con A-NWT) or concanavalin A-activated unfractionated spleen cells (Con A-spl) were on the average equally effective. Normal unfractionated spleen cells (spl) or nonactivated nylon-wool-nonadherent cells (NWT) were markedly less effective on a per cell basis. This pattern of stimulatory activity was in line with the relative stimulatory activity of these cell types in primary cytotoxic responses in the presence of interleukin 2 (IL-2) and also in line with the relative capacity to induce IL-2-dependent proliferation in H-2D-incompatible T-cell populations (cf. W. Dröge et al., J. Immunol.132, 2749, 1984). These differences in the immunogenic potential and the requirement for metabolically active stimulator cells suggested that these cells stimulated the CTL system directly and not indirectly through antigen processing cells of the immunized host. Nevertheless, the secondary cytotoxic response after injection of low numbers of Con A-spl into H-2 heterozygous recipients, (BALB/c × BALB/b)F1, or into recipients with recombinant H-2 haplotype (A.J) was only preferentially but not exclusively restricted to the H-2 haplotype of the immunizing cell populations. Restriction was considerably more complete when AC were used for immunization.  相似文献   

13.
The influence of lymphokines on the frequency and specificity of antigen-induced cytolytic T cells was investigated. Removal of an acid-labile factor(s) from supernatants produced by concanavalin A (Con A)-stimulated rat splenocytes was shown to increase the specificity of cytolytic T-cell clones as determined by their ability to distinguish between antigen modified and unmodified target cells. The overall frequency of cytolytic T cell precursors (antigen specific as well as nonspecific) was reduced in the presence of acid-pretreated rat Con A supernatant as compared to untreated rat Con A supernatant. Neither the addition of interleukin 2 nor interferon-gamma could substitute for this acid-labile factor. These data indicate that an additional lymphokine(s) contributes to the in vitro activation of nonspecific killer cells.  相似文献   

14.
We have investigated the role of target cell major histocompatibility complex antigens (MHC-Ag) in nonspecific lectin-dependent lymphocyte-mediated cytolysis (LDCC). In contrast to previous reports, we provide evidence that in LDCC the lectin Concanavalin A (Con A) does not mediate lysis by simply bridging cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) and targets via cell surface sugars or by activating the lytic function of CTLs attached to targets via the lectin. Lysis occurs when target cells are pretreated with lectin, but not when CTL are pretreated. Moreover, when CTL populations are used as both aggressors and targets, and only one is pretreated with lectin, lysis occurs only in the direction of the pretreated CTL target. We have observed that in LDCC, as in specific CTL-mediated killing, target recognition proceeds through interaction of CTL receptors (distinct from sugar moieties) and target cell surface determinants perhaps modified by, but distinct from, the lectin itself. We present evidence that the target determinants recognized in LDCC are MHC-Ag: 1) Cells that display reduced amounts of MHC-Ag are poor targets in LDCC; 2) removal of MHC-Ag by papain renders targets refractory to LDCC, however susceptibility is regained upon regeneration of MHC-Ag; and 3) antisera to target cell MHC-Ag block LDCC. The latter finding is also observed in oxidation-dependent CTL-mediated cytotoxicity. Involvement of MHC proteins in both specific and nonspecific CTL-mediated lysis reconciles an apparent fundamental distinction between these two processes and suggests a possible role for MHC proteins in a postrecognition step(s) leading to lysis.  相似文献   

15.
The monoclonal antibody 13.3 specifically blocks the trigger process of the NK-K562 cytolytic sequence at a post-binding effector cell level. This antibody was used to define differences in the lytic trigger processes of NK and other mechanisms of K562 lysis. Monoclonal antibody 13.3 inhibited lysis of K562 target cells by freshly isolated peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) and purified large granular lymphocytes (LGL), but had no inhibitory effect on antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity to K562 by these effectors. Lectin-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (LDCC) to this target cell was also unresponsive to 13.3. The 13.3-induced inhibition of NK-K562 lytic activity persisted when PBL were activated in culture with interleukin 2 (IL 2) for periods up to 48 hr. After 48 hr of culture, the degree of inhibition diminished progressively in medium containing fetal calf serum but not in medium containing autologous serum. This 13.3-unresponsive lytic activity in cultured PBL could be attributed to more than one cell type and was present in both the LGL and Fc gamma receptor-depleted T cell fraction. Thus, K562 lysis by freshly isolated human lymphocytes via NK, K, and LDCC mechanisms is characterized by heterogeneity of the post-binding effector cell trigger mechanism. K562 lysis by lymphocytes cultured with IL 2 is similarly heterogeneous.  相似文献   

16.
Migration-inhibitory-factor (MIF) activity was detected in culture supernatants of the human T-lymphoblast cell line Mo after stimulation with phytohemagglutinin and phorbol myristate acetate. MIF activity was not detected in unstimulated cultures reconstituted with phytohemagglutinin and phorbol myristate acetate. Conditioned medium from the cell line Mo was fractionated by Sephadex G-100 gel nitration. MIF-containing Sephadex fractions corresponding to a Mr, of 60,000 to 70,000 were further fractionated by isoelectrofocusing, resulting in a sharp peak of activity with a pI of 4.6 to 5.2. This MIF species constitutes a major form secreted by Mo cells; it adheres to Con A-Sepharose, is trypsin-resistant, and is denser than pure protein as determined by CsCl density gradient centrifugation. These are the same physicochemical characteristics previously established for second-day pH5-MIF from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (W. Y. Weiser et al., J. Immunol.126, 1958, 1981). In contrast, Sephadex fractions corresponding to larger molecules (Mr 70,000–90,000) contain at least two additional MIF species. These larger MIF forms have a pI of 3.0 to 3.5 and of 4.6 to 5.2 and lack affinity to Con A-Sepharose. Thus, the Mo T-cell line produces large quantities of at least three different species of human MIF.  相似文献   

17.
It has previously been shown that spleen cell transfer of clinical EAE requires donor cells to be cultured in vitro prior to transfer. Donor cells must be stimulated when cultured, and either Con A or the encephalitogen, guinea pig myelin basic protein (BP), satisfies this stimulation requirement. Following recovery from passive disease, recipients of these in vitro cultured cells will subsequently develop clinical symptoms of EAE sooner than controls when challenged with BP in complete Freund's adjuvant (BP-CFA). In the present study, three T-cell mitogens were evaluated as donor cell stimulants in the required in vitro culture period. Pokeweed mitogen (PWM) as well as Con A stimulated the donor cell population to the degree that clinical EAE could be transferred with 5 × 106 cultured viable cells. Con A at culture levels below 0.25 μg/ml did not yield transfer active cells even though proliferation levels were similar to those found at concentrations of Con A that did yield transfer active cells. Phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated cultures did not transfer clinical disease even though the degree of lectin induced proliferation ([3H]thymidine uptake as well as recovered cells from culture) was equivalent to the PWM- or Con A-stimulated, transfer positive, cultures. Mixing experiments suggested that the inability of PHA or low doses of Con A to induce transfer active cells was not due to the induction of suppressor cells. Although cells cultured with PHA do not transfer clinical EAE, recipients of these cells as well as recipients of either PWM- or Con A-stimulated donor cells develop an early appearance of disease upon subsequent challenge with BP-CFA. This included cells incubated with a concentration of Con A (0.1 μg/ml) which did not induce cells capable of transferring clinical EAE. These results suggest that PHA and perhaps the low dose of Con A may stimulate the proliferation of the EAE effector cell precursor population without causing the additional differentiation of this precursor population into the effector cell population which is capable of transferring clinical disease. Alternatively, PHA may expand only the helper cell population while effective doses of Con A and PWM would expand both helper and effector cell populations.  相似文献   

18.
Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB), a monovalent T cell mitogen and inducer of T suppressor cells, was found to be a potent polyclonal activator of cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) effective against concanavalin A (Con A)-treated target cells. In addition to polyclonal stimulation of CTL, SEB could reactivate "memory" CTL, alloimmunized 60 to 90 days earlier, into "secondary" CTL detectable as early as 24 hr after onset of stimulation and specific for the original priming target cells. Optimal cytolytic activity was induced at 0.5 to 10 micrograms/ml SEB; optimal priming time was 3 days, correlating well with the proliferative activity and morphologic transformation of small lymphocytes into large T lymphoblasts. Long-term cultures of splenocytes, stimulated by SEB, continued to express high cytolytic activity. It is noteworthy that although SEB and Con A are comparable CTL inducers, SEB, unlike Con A, is an ineffective mediator of nonspecific, CTL/target cell interactions. To the best of our knowledge this is the first example of a CTL inducer unable to mediate CTL-target interaction and lysis. The latter observations suggests that different receptors are involved in CTL activation and in CTL-target interaction resulting in lysis.  相似文献   

19.
The immune reactivity of mice (C57BL/6, H-2b) which had been challenged with various numbers (102–108) of allogeneic tumor cells (P815, H-2d) was assessed at various times after challenge. Challenge with a high dose (108) of tumor cells resulted in the development of direct cytotoxicity (DCMC), lectin-dependent cytotoxicity (LDCC), delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH), and antibody production, whereas challenge with lower doses (< 106) of tumor cells favored development of DTH and LDCC with marginal or no DCMC or antibody production. Spleen cells from low-dose alloimmune animals failed to produce DCMC when cultured with P815 cells in vitro and were capable of nonspecifically suppressing the DCMC response of normal spleen cells in MLC. Treatment with cyclophosphamide (100 mg/kg) prior to alloimmunization did not alter the pattern of DTH and cytotoxic reactivity, although treatment after alloimmunization was immunosuppressive for all forms of reactivity. When low-dose challenge was followed by cyclophosphamide treatment and a subsequent high-dose challenge, selective inhibition of DTH, LDCC, and suppressor activity, but not DCMC, was observed. The data suggest that (a) the initial challenge dose plays a significant role in determining which effector and regulatory populations will be activated and what direction the expression of immune reactivity will take; (b) the activated responding populations of DTH, DCMC, and LDCC effector cells are sensitive to cyclophosphamide treatment, whereas the precursors of each are resistant to the effects of the drug; (c) low-dose alloimmunization may be used in combination with cyclophosphamide treatment to modulate DTH, DCMC, and LDCC reactivity in a selective manner; (d) the cytotoxic effector cells responding to highdose challenge and mediating DCMC and those responding to low-dose challenge and mediating LDCC appear to arise from distinct precursor populations.  相似文献   

20.
Lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC) of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from patients with stage I cancer of the larynx (LC) was evaluated using human adherent 3H-TdR-prelabeled HEp-2 carcinoma cells as targets at 50:1 effector-target ratio with 25 micrograms/ml concanavalin A (Con A) in a 24-hour assay. Under these conditions, but without Con A, no considerable natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity (NCMC) was performed by PBMC either from control or from LC donors. Depressed levels of LDCC, but augmented ADCC to chicken red blood cells were detected in LC patients. Natural killer activity to K562 targets was not different from that of control subjects. In parallel studies, normal Con A-induced blastogenesis and B cell counts, low T, and active T cell counts, as well as high Leu-11a+ cell counts were detected in patients with LC. The relationship between depressed LDCC and low T, and active T cell counts, and enhanced ADCC and high Leu-11a+ cell counts is suggested in stage I LC patients.  相似文献   

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