Opposing effects of human peripheral blood lymphocytes on the growth of cultured leukemia cell lines |
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Authors: | J F Carlquist C Ford L Alley |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology, LDS Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah 84143 U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Natural killing of two human leukemia cell lines (K562 and Molt 4) in a soft-agar, clonagenic assay was shown to be the result of two opposite yet concurrent processes: target cell colony stimulation and inhibition. The stimulatory effect was demonstrable when the effector lymphocytes and target cells were separated in contiguous agar layers, suggesting mediation by a soluble factor. Similarly, stimulation occurred when the effector lymphocytes and target cells were combined at low effector-target cell ratios that do not favor direct cell contact. Target colony inhibition was found to be dominant when large E:T ratios were employed. Both target-effector binding and natural killing were significantly reduced in medium devoid of divalent cations. |
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Keywords: | Author to whom correspondence should be addressed: Department of Pathology LDS Hospital 325 8th Ave. Salt Lake City Utah 84143. |
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