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1.
Human rIL-4 was studied for its capacity to induce lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell activity. In contrast to IL-2, IL-4 was not able to induce LAK cell activity in cell cultures derived from peripheral blood. IL-4 added simultaneously with IL-2 to such cultures suppressed IL-2-induced LAK cell activity measured against Daudi and the melanoma cell line MEWO in a dose-dependent way. IL-4 also inhibited the induction of LAK cell activity in CD2+, CD3-, CD4-, CD8- cells, suggesting that IL-4 acts directly on LAK precursor cells. IL-4 added 24 h after the addition of IL-2 failed to inhibit the generation of LAK cell activity. Cytotoxic activity of various types of NK cell clones was not affected after incubation in IL-4 for 3 days, indicating that IL-4 does not affect the activity of already committed killer cells. No significant differences were observed in the percentages of Tac+, NKH-1+ and CD16+ cells after culturing PBL in IL-2, IL-4 or combinations of IL-2 and IL-4 for 3 days. IL-4 also inhibited the activation of non-specific cytotoxic activity in MLC, as measured against K-562 and MEWO cells. In contrast, the Ag-specific CTL activity against the stimulator cells was augmented by IL-4. Collectively, these data indicate that IL-4 prevents the activation of LAK cell precursors by IL-2, but does not inhibit the generation of Ag-specific CTL.  相似文献   

2.
Summary High levels of cytotoxic activity against the natural killer (NK) cell-sensitive target K562 and the NK-resistant target UCLA-SO-M14 (M14) can be generated in vitro either by mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) or by culture of lymphocytes in interleukin 2 (IL2) (lymphokine activated killer (LAK) cells). The purpose of this study was to identify similarities and differences between MLC-LAK and IL2-LAK cells and allospecific cytotoxic T cells. Induction of cytotoxicity against K562 and M14 in both culture systems was inhibited by antibodies specific either for IL2 or the Tac IL2 receptor. Like NK effector cells, the precursors for the MLC-LAK cells were low density large lymphocytes. However these precursors differed from the large granular lymphocytes that mediated NK cytolysis in sensitivity to the toxic lysosomotropic agent L-leucine methyl ester (LME). The resistance of the MLC-LAK precursors to LME indicated that the precursors included large agranular lymphocytes. Although interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) is produced in MLC and in IL2 containing cultures, it is not required for induction of either type of cytotoxic activity. Neutralization of IFN-gamma in MLC-and IL2-containing cultures with specific antibodies had no effect on the induction of cytotoxic activities. Both allospecific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) and LAK activities were enhanced by IL2 and IFN-gamma at the effector cell stage. However, the mechanism of cytolysis was different in the two systems. NK- and MLC-induced LAK activities were independent of CD3-T cell receptor complex while CTL activity was blocked by monoclonal antibodies specific for the CD3 antigen. These results suggest that NK and the in vitro induced LAK cytotoxicities are a family of related functions that differ from CTL. Furthermore, MLC-induced and IL2-induced cytotoxicities against K562 and M14 appear to be identical.This work was supported by NIH grant CA34442  相似文献   

3.
The activity of natural effector (NE) cells was studied in lamina propria lymphocytes (LPL) obtained from 61 histologically normal specimens of human intestine, which included 45 resected for colon carcinoma and 16 resected for nonmalignant conditions. The mean spontaneous natural killer (NK) cell activity in LPL (1.7 X 10(2) cytotoxic units (C.U.)/10(5) cells) was very low in contrast to that found in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) (38.5 X 10(2) C.U./10(5) cells). Significant NK activity was detected in only 16 (47%) of the tissues resected for carcinoma, and in five (38%) of those removed for nonmalignant conditions. Exposure to human leucocyte interferon resulted in only minimal increases in cytotoxicity for K562 target cells. Consistent with these findings, large granular lymphocytes represented less than 0.5% of freshly isolated LPL. Cultures of LPL from both carcinoma and nonmalignant conditions in MLA144-conditioned medium (CM), a source of interleukin 2 (IL 2), generated marked increases in cytotoxicity to levels comparable with or exceeding those found in PBMC. (Mean cytotoxicities were 90.4 X 10(2) and 49 X 10(2) C.U./10(5) cells, respectively.) Cytotoxicity induced by culture in MLA144-CM could be blocked by pretreatment of LPL with the monoclonal antibody anti-Tac directed against the IL 2 receptor. In addition, LPL cultured in recombinant human IL 2 were induced to levels of cytotoxicity that were similar to those induced by MLA144-CM. These data indicate that IL 2 is the factor in MLA144-CM responsible for generating lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells in LPL. The IL 2-activated LPL killer cells were OKT11+, OKT3-, Leu-7-, Leu-11b-, as determined by antibody and complement-mediated lysis, and the precursor cells in the lamina propria necessary for generation of killer cells by IL 2 were also OKT11+, OKT3-, Leu-7-, Leu-11b-. These studies indicate that LAK cells may be an important potential source of nonspecific cytotoxicity in the intestinal mucosa.  相似文献   

4.
Human thymocytes cultured in the presence of an interleukin-2 (IL-2) source (the supernatant of the MLA 144 cell line) that contains no lectin or interferon (IFN) activity become cytotoxic to K562 target cells. Inclusion of allogeneic lymphoblastoid cells in these cultures results in the earlier detection of cytotoxic activity. Addition of IFN to the thymocyte cultures has no effect on the development of cytotoxic activity. In contrast, the cytotoxic activity of IL-2 activated thymocytes can be augmented by subsequent exposure to IFN. The specificity and cell surface phenotype of the cytotoxic thymocytes are similar to that of peripheral blood natural killer cells.  相似文献   

5.
During the incubation of murine spleen, lymph node, or bone marrow cells with IL-2 (1000 U/ml) a small percentage of cells became adherent to the surface of plastic tissue culture flasks. After removal of the non-adherent lymphoid cells, plastic adherent lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells could be efficiently expanded in the presence of IL-2. Plastic adherent-derived A-LAK cells were characterized by high rates of proliferation and their cytotoxic activity was more than 10 fold higher than LAK cells generated in the bulk (unfractionated) spleen cell cultures. A-LAK cells could be continuously generated from the non-adherent cell population. Using multiple transfers (every 1 to 2 days) of non-adherent LAK cells into new flasks, new rounds of plastic adherent cells were generated with high expansion capability and high levels of cytotoxic activity. Morphologically, A-LAK cells were large granular lymphocyte and phenotypically expressed markers characteristic of NK cells (asialo GM1+, NK1.1+, Qa5+, Ly-6.2+, Thy-1.2+, but negative for Lyt-2.2 and L3T4). A-LAK cells generated from mice of different strains expressing low and high levels of NK cell activity were equally highly cytotoxic. However, A-LAK cells obtained from nude or beige mice had relatively lower levels of cytotoxicity. Stimulation of NK cell activity by poly I:C or inhibition by in vivo or in vitro treatment with anti-asialo GM1 serum did not affect the generation of A-LAK cells. A-LAK cells derived from spleen or bone marrow of C57BL/6 or nude mice treated with anti-asialo GM1 serum were found to be asialo GM1+ suggesting that A-LAK cell could be generated from the asialo GM1- precursor cells. Expansion of plastic adherent A-LAK cells in the presence of IL-2 could provide large numbers of highly purified cytotoxic A-LAK cells suitable for cancer immunotherapy.  相似文献   

6.
We have generated lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells from human thymocytes in order to assess the relationship between LAK cells and T cells. Fresh thymocytes lack natural cytotoxic activity, and cytotoxicity cannot be stimulated by short term (1 hr) incubation with interferon or recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2). In addition, thymocytes are phenotypically devoid of cells bearing the natural killer (NK)-associated markers cluster designation (CD) 16 and NKH-1. After culture for 5 to 8 days with rIL-2, thymocytes display high levels of cytotoxic activity against both NK-sensitive and NK-resistant targets. Thymocytes require slightly more IL-2 than do peripheral blood lymphocytes to generate LAK activity. We have examined the phenotype of the thymocyte LAK precursor and effector cells. Thymocyte LAK precursors are of low to medium density, CD1-negative, and predominantly CD3-negative. Although CD3-positive cells proliferate in response to rIL-2, they are low in cytolytic capabilities. The effector cells, like the LAK precursors, are low to medium density lymphocytes. The cytotoxic cells are predominantly CD3-negative, and cytotoxic activity cannot be blocked with the use of anti-CD3 monoclonal antibodies. The effector cells also lack most NK-associated markers (HNK-1, and the CD16 markers Leu-11b and B73.1) but possess the NK-associated marker NKH-1 (N901). The responsive cell appears to be at a very early stage of thymic development, and it does not appear to either require or express the CD3-T cell receptor complex.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The effect(s) of purified transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) on the induction and function of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) was examined. The addition of TGF-beta, but not PDGF, to cultures containing fresh C57BL/6 mouse splenocytes or human peripheral blood lymphocytes plus recombinant interleukin-2 markedly inhibited the development of mouse and human LAK cell activity (measured after 3 days for cytotoxicity against cultured or fresh tumor targets in 4-h 51Cr release assays). The addition of TGF-beta, but not PDGF, to a one-way, C57BL/6 anti-DBA/2, mixed lymphocyte reaction effectively blocked the generation of allospecific CTL as well. However, TGF-beta did not inhibit the effector function of LAK cells or of allospecific CTL when added directly to the short-term cytolytic assay. A second form of homodimeric TGF-beta, type 2, was also found to be suppressive on the development of murine LAK cells and allospecific CTL. Collectively, these data demonstrate that the peptide TGF-beta is a potent inhibitor of LAK cell and CTL generation in vitro.  相似文献   

8.
To study the effect of IL-6 on the development of cytotoxic cells, we examined lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity generated from human nonadherent PBL. Addition of rIL-6 at the initiation of 5-day PBL cultures significantly increases LAK activity in the presence of low concentrations (between 5 and 25 u/ml) of rIL-2. RIL-6 alone induces no PBL LAK activity but at doses as low as 0.8 u/ml rIL-6 enhances LAK activity with optimal enhancement of LAK at 5.0 u/ml of rIL-6. This enhancement is independent of effects on cells growth as rIL-6 did not affect the cell recovery of PBL cultured in rIL-2. RIL-6-enhanced LAK is mediated by the same type of effector cells as those of LAK from rIL-2 alone with effector cells primarily generated from large granular CD3-negative E rosetting lymphocytes. RIL-6 does not change the time course of LAK development and pretreatment of PBL with rIL-6 has no effect on the PBL response to subsequent rIL-2 induction of LAK. Addition of rIL-6 to LAK cultures 2 hr before the cytotoxicity assay shows equal enhancement as addition at the initiation of the culture. However, rIL-6 requires the presence of both rIL-2 and another factor in the supernatant from LAK cultures in order to enhance LAK. Our results indicate that IL-6 can modulate LAK activity at a very late stage of LAK development, and that the enhancement by IL-6 is dependent on the presence of IL-2 and another soluble factor generated during rIL-2 culture.  相似文献   

9.
CD4+ and CD8+ T cells do not develop significant lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity when PBL are cultured with IL-2 or even when they are activated with a T cell stimulus such as OKT3 mAb. The possibility that a T cell regulatory mechanism prevents the development of LAK activity by CD4+ or CD8+ cells in OKT3 mAb and IL-2 cultures was tested by depleting CD8+ or CD4+ cells from PBL before stimulation with OKT3 and IL-2. Under these conditions, the remaining CD4+ and CD8+ cells were able to generate non-MHC-restricted lysis of NK-resistant tumor targets. Our data suggested that a regulatory signal was present in the culture to prevent the development of lytic function by T cells. T cells removed from the PBL cultures were, upon culture with IL-2, able to generate high LAK activity, suggesting that inhibition of the CD4+ or CD8+ T cell-mediated LAK activity was an active ongoing process, which blocked the lysis at the level of the activated cell and not the precursor cell. Mixing experiments demonstrated that the CD4+ or the CD8+ cells isolated from the PBL cultures were able to inhibit the development of lytic function in the CD4-depleted and CD8-depleted cultures. Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) has been shown to block LAK activity of NK cells in IL-2-stimulated cultures. When TGF-beta was added to CD4(+)- or CD8(+)-depleted cultures, it also inhibited LAK activity of T cells in a dose-dependent fashion, without interfering with T cell growth. Lytic activity returned to activated levels when TGF-beta was removed from the culture medium, thereby demonstrating the reversibility of TGF-beta inhibition.  相似文献   

10.
Thymocyte-derived lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells were used as a model for the study of the cytokine driven development of cytotoxicity. These cells are devoid of initial cytotoxic activity but upon culture in IL-2 they develop into cytotoxic effectors. The parameters of the response of thymocytes to IL-6 are similar to that of PBL in that IL-6, at concentrations as low as 1 mu/ml, increases cytotoxicity of thymocyte-LAK cells when generated in low doses (25-50 mu/ml) of IL-2. IL-6-enhanced thymocyte-LAK cytotoxicity is observed when tested against both NK-resistant and NK-sensitive tumor cell lines. IL-6 alone does not induce any cytotoxicity from thymocytes nor does IL-6 change the time course of thymocyte-LAK cell generation in IL-2 culture. IL-6 does not affect DNA synthesis, total cell number, proportion of CD56+ cells, or the expression of IL-2R (both P55 and P75 glycoproteins) in IL-2-cultured thymocytes. Instead, IL-6 used to treat mature thymocyte-LAK effector cells for as little as 1 hr prior to 51Cr-release assay increases LAK cytotoxicity. This enhancement is abrogated by pretreatment of effector cells with cycloheximide, suggesting that protein synthesis is required for IL-6 to enhance LAK cell activity. The precursor phenotypes of IL-6-responsive thymocyte-LAK cells are CD3-/CD5-. The effector phenotypes of IL-6-enhanced thymocyte-LAK cells are CD5-/CD56+. Thus, IL-6 depends on synthesis of rapid-turnover proteins to act on mature CD56+/CD5- LAK cells to increase their cytotoxic function.  相似文献   

11.
It is known that IL-2 induces lymphocytes to produce interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and this IFN type is particularly efficient in inducing tumor cell resistance to natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis. We have investigated the effect of IFN on tumor cell sensitivity to LAK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Pretreatment of the human K562 leukemia and HHMS melanoma with IFN-gamma and the Daudi lymphoma with IFN-alpha caused a significant reduction in sensitivity to lysis by human LAK cells generated in vitro in the presence of human recombinant IL-2 (100 U/ml). The LAK activity was mediated by cells expressing NK cell markers (CD16,NKH1) as well as by cells with T cell markers (CD3, CD5). IFN-treated K562 cells were protected from lysis mediated by all these populations. Supernatants from LAK cultures containing IFN-gamma were able to induce NK and LAK resistance when used to pretreat K562 overnight. Antibodies to IFN-gamma but not to IFN-alpha were able to neutralize this activity. Taken together, these results indicate that the production of IFN-gamma by LAK cells may be of importance in induction of tumor cell resistance to LAK cell-mediated lysis.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of various recombinant cytokines i.e. IL-1 alpha, IL-3, IL-4, IL-6, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha and GM-CSF used either alone or in combination with IL-2, were investigated in this study. First, their capacity to induce killer cells from human PBL was examined by evaluating the degree of killing of human NK-sensitive K562 or NK-resistant Daudi cells. Second the effects of these cytokines, LAK cells (at 1/1, 2/1, 4/1 ratio LAK effectors/bone marrow cell targets) and of the supernatants from washed killer cell cultures, were examined on the colony forming ability of human bone marrow for GM-CFU in vitro. Various degrees of NK activity against K562 was observed in PBL stimulated with the cytokines, whereas LAK activity was found only with IL-2 alone. Culture of PBL with IL-2 + IL-1 alpha or IL-2 + IL-6 or IL-2 + GM-CSF resulted in the highest LAK killing. However, addition of TNF-alpha, or IFN-gamma to IL-2 in cultures resulted in a significant suppression of LAK cell activity. Addition of IL-1 alpha, IL-2, IL-3, and IL-4 to BM cultures had little or no effect on day 14 GM-CFU, whereas addition of IL-6 and GM-CSF resulted in a stimulatory effect. LAK cells induced with IL-2 alone had no significant suppressive effects on GM-CFU.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
It is possible to generate high levels of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity in short-term culture from cells enriched for natural killer (NK) activity. To determine whether LAK activity can also be generated from non-NK cells, we have depleted peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) of NK cells prior to culture with IL-2. NK activity in PBL is correlated with the intensity of staining with the lysosomotropic vital dye quinacrine. Quinacrine dim PBL, which are devoid of lytic NK cells, are capable of developing LAK activity following culture with IL-2. We have also separated PBL using the NK-associated NKH-1 marker. Depleting NKH-1+ cells eliminates NK activity but the ability to develop LAK activity is retained. NKH-1-depleted cells generate less LAK activity than unseparated or NKH-1-positive cells and do not proliferate as well as unseparated cells to IL-2. When NK-depleted cells are subsequently examined for the expression of the NKH-1 antigen, this marker is absent from most cells at Day 3 of IL-1 culture, but is expressed on an increasing number of cells by Days 6-8. These results suggest that LAK derived from non-NK cells is functionally and phenotypically similar to LAK from PBL-containing NK cells, and may be the result of the activation of an NK precursor population.  相似文献   

14.
Induction of murine lymphokine-activated killer cells by recombinant IL-7   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The data demonstrate that IL-7, a cytokine that was originally identified, purified, and cloned based upon its ability to support the growth of pre-B cells in vitro, also induces proliferation and promotes the generation of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell activity in populations of resting peripheral lymphoid cells. Although the kinetics of LAK induction by IL-7 (which peaked at days 6 to 8 of culture) was slower than that detected in cultures containing IL-2 (which peaked at day 4), IL-7 was significantly more effective at maintaining cytotoxic activity over longer periods of time, and greater viable cell recoveries, than was IL-2. A wide range of murine tumor target cells were found to be lysed in an MHC-unrestricted fashion by IL-7 induced LAK, but syngeneic Con A-induced lymphoblasts were not; nor were target cells from the human tumors K562 or Daudi lysed by IL-7 LAK. IL-7 LAK were induced in populations of lymphoid cells obtained from secondary lymphoid tissues (peripheral lymph nodes and spleen), but not from primary lymphoid tissues (thymus and bone marrow). LAK induced by IL-7 from unfractionated populations of lymphoid cells were completely eliminated by treatment with anti-CD8 or anti-Thy-1+C, and unaffected by treatment with anti-CD4, anti-asialo GM1 or anti-NK1.1+C. Interestingly, although no detectable CD4+ effector cells could be detected in populations of LAK generated from unfractionated populations of lymphoid cells stimulated by IL-7, they were found to be generated from populations of lymphoid cells from which CD8+ cells had been eliminated before being cultured in medium containing IL-7. These data suggest that CD4+ T cells do not normally give rise to IL-7-induced LAK unless they are first separated from CD8+ T cells. LAK induced by IL-7 appear to be distinct from LAK activity induced by IL-2 in that there is no detectable involvement of NK-like effector cells at either the precursor or effector cell stages.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Activation of lymphocytes by interleukin-2 (IL-2) induces lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells that show promising effects on tumour growth in clinical trials. We examined the effect of the superantigen staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) on anti-tumour activity of freshly prepared human lymphocytes. Picomolar amounts of SEA rapidly induced cytotoxic activity against K562 and Raji cells as well as some natural-killer(NK)-resistant tumour cell lines. Cytotoxic activity was not dependent on target cell expression of either major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I or II antigens as shown using mutated cell lines. Cell-sorting experiments showed that the activity was expressed by NK (CD5CD56+) as well as T (CD5+) cells, although the former contained the majority of cytotoxic activity. NK cells could not be directly activated by SEA. In contrast, SEA activated purified T cells to the same extent as in bulk cultures. It is suggested that SEA activation of NK cells is secondary to that brought about by lymphokines produced by T cells. Activation of LAK cells with SEA was comparable in magnitude as well as target cell spectrum to that of IL-2. In addition to the LAK-like cytotoxic activity induced by SEA, a superimposed cytotoxicity towards target cells expressing MHC class II antigens coated with SEA was observed. This staphylococcal-enterotoxin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (SDCC) was exclusively mediated by T cells. It is well established that MHC class II antigens function as receptors for staphylococcal enterotoxins on mammalian cells and that the complex between MHC class II antigen and — SEA apparently functions as a target structure for activated T cells with target cell lysis as a consequence. Activation of T lymphocytes with IL-2 also resulted in the capability to mediate SDCC. Staphylococcal enterotoxins represent a novel way of inducing anti-tumour activity in human lymphocytes, which could be of value in therapeutic applications.  相似文献   

16.
The coculture of rat bone marrow cells with recombinant interleukin-2 induced the generation of cells mediating natural killer (NK) activity and subsequent lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity depending upon the dose of IL-2 and time of culture. NK activity was detected as early as 4 to 5 days after the addition of IL-2 and could be evoked with as little as 5 to 50 U/ml. The induced NK cells had large granular lymphocyte (LGL) morphology and expressed 0X8 and asialo GM1 surface markers but did not express 0X19 or W3/25 markers. LAK activity was detected only after 5 days of culture, and required above 100 U/ml IL-2. Cells mediating LAK activity also expressed 0X8 and asialo GM1 but not 0X19. The generation of detectable NK and subsequent LAK activity was due to induction of early progenitor cells and not contaminating mature LGL/NK cells within the bone marrow population since of removal of such mature NK cells with L-leucine methyl ester (L-LME) did not affect the subsequent generation of either activity. Moreover, the removal of actively dividing cells as well as mature NK cells from the bone marrow by treatment with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in vivo enriched the remaining bone marrow population for both NK and LAK progenitor cells. The phenotype of the L-LME- and 5-FU-resistant NK and LAK progenitor cells within populations of bone marrow was determined by antibody plus complement depletion analysis. Although treatment of normal bone marrow with anti-asialo GM1 + C reduced the induction of NK and LAK activity in 5-day cultures, treatment of 5-FU marrow with anti-asialo GM1 + C did not affect either activity. Treatment with a pan-T cell antibody + C did not affect the development of NK or LAK activity under any conditions. Thus, the 5-FU-resistant NK/LAK progenitors were asialo GM1 negative but became asialo GM1+ after induction by IL-2. Finally, evidence that bone marrow-derived LAK cells were generated directly from the IL-2-induced NK cells was obtained by treating the IL-2-induced LGL/NK cells with L-LME.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Both IL-3 and IL-4 have multi-CSF activity on early marrow progenitors. We have examined the effect of IL-3 and IL-4 on the differentiation of NK cells from their marrow-derived precursors and have further examined the interactions of these cytokines with IL-2 and IL-1. We tested marrow which had been depleted of mature cells and of E rosette-positive cells (including NK cells) by treatment with soybean lectin and SRBC (SBA-E-BM). The cytolytic activities of the SBA-E-BM samples were tested in 51Cr-release assays after 7 days of liquid culture. K562 targets were used as a measure of NK activity and NK-resistant Daudi targets were used to measure lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell activity. Neither NK nor LAK activity was detectable in marrow cultured in medium without cytokines, or in medium containing IL-3, or IL-4 alone. Both of these cytokines were shown to be inhibitory to the IL-2-induced generation of NK and LAK activity from SBA-E-BM at concentrations as low as 1 U/ml. The inhibitory activity of both IL-3 and IL-4 was found to occur early in the marrow cultures, with little or no inhibitory effects seen if added 48 h after IL-2. IL-3 appeared to be specifically inhibitory to NK cell precursors since addition of IL-3 to cultures of PBMC did not inhibit IL-2-induced lytic activities. In contrast, IL-4 was equally inhibitory to the activation of marrow and peripheral blood NK cells by IL-2. Mixing experiments demonstrated that the reduced lytic activity in IL-3 or IL-4 containing marrow cultures were not due to suppression of the NK effectors, nor could marrow cultured in IL-3 or IL-4 serve as targets for IL-2-activated NK cells. Phenotype analysis of the lymphoid cells in marrow cultures containing IL-2 combined with IL-3 or IL-4 revealed fewer cells expressing Leu-11 (CD16), or Leu-19 (CD56) and fewer CD16, CD56 coexpressing cells compared with marrow cultured in medium containing IL-2 alone. The inhibitory activity of IL-4, but not IL-3, could be partially reversed if IL-1 was added to the cultures, suggesting that IL-1 and IL-4 have opposing activities on NK cells responsiveness to IL-2. These interactions between cytokines might be important in the regulation of NK cell differentiation and on the functional activity of mature NK cells.  相似文献   

18.
In this study we have investigated the role of accessory cells in the development of lymphokine-activated killer cells (LAK) from highly purified human NK and small resting T cell progenitors. As accessory cells we used autologous, as well as allogeneic, monocytes, and dendritic cell enriched cells. Both NK and T cells were able to generate LAK activity, but their activation requirements were different. NK cells were activated merely by IL-2, and accessory cells did not enhance their lytic activity in the presence or absence of IL-2. Conversely, T cells were practically unresponsive to even high concentrations of IL-2 having a strict requirement for accessory cells for the development of lytic activity and proliferation. Accessory cells differed in their ability to activate T cells presumably depending on their ability to induce IL-2 synthesis, allogeneic dendritic cells being the most effective accessory cells and IL-2 synthesis stimulators. Allogeneic accessory cells could induce lytic activity in T cells even in the absence of exogenous IL-2. Thus, accessory cells play a central role in expanding the LAK effector cell population.  相似文献   

19.
In order to select the most cytotoxic effector cells for adoptive immunotherapy, lymphokine activated killer (LAK) cells, tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and autologous mixed lymphocyte tumor cell culture (MLTC) cells derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) in the same subject with head and neck carcinomas were prepared. The autologous tumor cell killing activity and cell surface phenotypes of each of the three effector cells were studied. MLTC cells cultured with interleukin-2 (IL-2) showed the strongest cytotoxic activity among these three different effector cells. Although TILs had suppressed killing activity immediately after isolation, after successive cultivations with IL-2, a cytotoxic activity against autologous tumor cells stronger than that of LAK cells appeared. Both IL-2 stimulated MLTC cells and TILs showed an enrichment of CD8 positive and CDU negative cells in a CD3 positive subpopulation.Abbreviations CD cluster differentiation - IL-2 interleukin-2 - LA lymphokine activated - LAK lymphokine activated killer - MLTC mixed lymphocyte tumor cell culture - NK natural killer - PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cells - TILs tumor infiltrating lymphocytes  相似文献   

20.
Summary We developed a monoclonal antibody (mAb) 211, which recognizes the precursors in peripheral blood of lymphokine-activated killer cells (LAK) induced by recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2). In conjunction with complement mAb 211 also eliminates natural killer cells (NK) and a majority of the cytotoxic T lymphocytes. B cells and monocytes do not express the 211 antigen. Since mAb 211 recognized such a large percentage of peripheral blood lymphocytes we examined which 211+ subpopulation was the predominant precursor of rIL-2-induced LAK cells using two-color fluoresence-activated cell sorting (fluorescein-conjugated 211 mAb plus phycoerythrin-CD11b). This method identified the 211+/ CD11b+ population as the predominant phenotype of the rIL-2-induced LAK precursor. In addition, we directly compared the phenotype of the LAK precursor induced by delectinated T-cell growth factor (TCGF) to that induced by rIL-2. The 211-depleted population, which was devoid of NK cells and LAK precursors (inducible by rIL-2), was capable of generating LAK activity when TCGF was used as the source of lymphokine. LAK cells induced by TCGF from the 211-depleted population lysed a fresh sarcoma and an NK-resistant cultured melanoma tumor target but not the Daudi cell line, which was lysed by rIL-2-induced LAK cells. Lymphoid subpopulations, depleted using NKH1a mAb, behaved similarly, generating high levels of lysis against the two solid tumor targets when cultured with TCGF but not with rIL-2. CD 3-depleted populations showed enrichment for LAK precursors using either rIL-2 or TCGF. These results indicate that while rIL-2-induced LAK precursors cannot be separated from cells with NK activity, TCGF-induced LAK cells can be generated from populations of peripheral blood mononuclear cells without NK activity.  相似文献   

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