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1.
Natural killer (NK) cells belong to the innate arm of the immune system and though activated NK cells can modulate immune responses through the secretion of cytokines, their primary effector function is through target cell lysis. Accordingly, cytotoxicity assays are central to studying NK cell function. The 51Chromium release assay, is the “gold standard” for cytotoxicity assay, however, due to concerns over toxicity associated with the use and disposal of radioactive compounds there is a significant interest in non-radioactive methods. We have previously used the calcein release assay as a non-radioactive alternative for studying NK cell cytotoxicity. In this study, we show that the calcein release assay varies in its dynamic range for different tumor targets, and that the entrapped calcein could remain unreleased within apoptotic bodies of lysed tumor targets or incompletely released resulting in underestimation of percent specific lysis. To overcome these limitations, we developed a novel cytotoxicity assay using the Cellometer Vision Image Cytometer and compared this method to standard calcein release assay for measuring NK cell cytotoxicity. Using tumor lines K562, 721.221, and Jurkat, we demonstrate here that image cytometry shows significantly higher percent specific lysis of the target cells compared to the standard calcein release assay within the same experimental setup. Image cytometry is able to accurately analyze live target cells by excluding dimmer cells and smaller apoptotic bodies from viable target cell counts. The image cytometry-based cytotoxicity assay is a simple, direct and sensitive method and is an appealing option for routine cytotoxicity assay.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND: The most common assay used to detect natural killer (NK) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) activity is the (51)Cr release assay. The numerous disadvantages of this method led us to evaluate cytotoxicity functions by flow cytometry. We described a flow cytometric assay to assess NK and CTL activity from different species. METHODS: This assay is based on a dual fluorescent staining of target cells. The dye, DIOC18((3)) (3, 3'-dioctadecyloxacarbocyanine perchlorate), is used to stain the membrane of different target cells. Propidium iodide (PI) is used to label dead target and effector cells. This labeling allows a clear discrimination between both cell populations. RESULTS: A good correlation was observed between the percentage of target lysis and the effector-to-target cell (E/T) ratios with human and porcine peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) as effector cells. The flow cytometric assay was shown to be as sensitive and as reliable as the (51)Cr release performed with human cells. The assay was also applied successfully to measure NK cell activity in other animal species (pig, rabbit, hen, and mouse) and to measure murine CTL activity against the influenza virus. CONCLUSIONS: We provide evidence that the flow cytometric assay using DIOC18((3)) is highly reproducible and is suitable to measure different types of cell cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

3.
NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity results from membrane interactions between NK effector and target cells. The role of membrane fluidity in these events is not known. The present study was undertaken to investigate the effect of changes in membrane lipid fluidity of NK effector and NK-sensitive target cells on the lytic pathway of NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Fluidity was modulated by various lipids and measured by fluorescence polarization. NK effector cells treated with phosphatidylcholine complexed with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and bovine serum albumin (BSA) showed increased membrane fluidity. This fluidization of the effector cell membrane resulted in a significant inhibition of cytotoxic activity in the 51Cr-release assay. Single cell analysis revealed that the inhibition was due to a decrease in the frequency of NK target conjugates and reduced killing of conjugated targets. Rigidification of the NK effector cell membranes by treatment with cholesteryl hemisuccinate complexed with PVP and BSA also resulted in inhibition of cytotoxicity. This inhibition was post binding, because binding was increased and lysis was abrogated. Fluidization of K562 target cell membranes caused a slight but insignificant increase in their lysis by NK cells without affecting the binding step. On the other hand, rigidification of K562 membranes decreased the sensitivity of these target cells to lysis. Single cell analysis revealed that this inhibition of NK lysis is post binding, because the frequency of killers was significantly decreased. It was also shown that membrane rigidification of target cells that were programmed for lysis during the lethal hit stage and subsequently separated from effector cells, rendered the programmed cells resistant to killing during the killer cell-independent lysis step. These results demonstrate that fluidization or rigidification of the plasma membrane of either effector or target cells affect different stages of the NK cell-mediated cytolytic events.  相似文献   

4.
The present study strongly suggests that, in humans, natural killer (NK) activity and antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) are mediated by the same effector cell population. This is supported by two different experimental approaches. First, competition for NK effector cells was accompanied by simultaneous inhibition of ADCC activity. Target cells sensitive to NK activity were capable of inhibiting specifically an ADCC assay in cold target competition experiments. Second, specific removal of NK cells on monolayers formed by target cells sensitive to NK activity caused simultaneous depletion of ADCC effector cells. In association with the removal on the monolayers of effector cells for ADCC as well as NK activity, we also found a significant depletion of cells bearing Fc gamma receptors.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
BACKGROUND: A highly sensitive, fast, and simple flow cytometric assay to assess human red blood cell (RBCs) viability and aging is reported. METHODS: The assay described in this report is based on the use of acetoxymethyl ester of calcein (calcein-AM), a fluorescein derivative and nonfluorescent vital dye that passively crosses the cell membrane of viable cells and is converted by cytosolic esterases into green fluorescent calcein, which is retained by cells with intact membranes and inactive multidrug resistance protein. The loss of calcein can be easily determined by flow cytometry, and the cytosolic localization of esterases was demonstrated by spectrofluorometric analyses. RESULTS: We found that RBCs incubated with Ca(2+), which induces a rapid and modulated self-death that shares several features with apoptosis (Bratosin et al., Cell Death Differ 2001;8:1143-1156), externalized phosphatidylserine and lost calcein staining and cytosolic adenosine triphosphate content. Double labeling using phycoerythrin-labeled annexin-V and calcein-AM showed that the decrease of esterase activity is an early event that precedes the externalization of phosphatidylserine residues. In addition, this assay allowed us to distinguish young and aged RBCs isolated by ultracentrifugation in a self-forming Percoll gradient and can be considered as a reliable marker of RBC aging. CONCLUSIONS: Calcein-AM assay may represent a wide application for assessing RBC viability, particularly in blood banks.  相似文献   

7.
MLC-generated cells were tested on 7 consecutive days in the single cell cytotoxicity assay to determine the kinetics of natural and allospecific killing. Maximum cytotoxicity to the NK-sensitive target, K562, was found on Day 3 of MLC with an increase at that time in both the number of cells binding and the number of cells killing K562. The maximum allospecific response was found on Days 6 and 7 with an increase in cells able to bind and kill the alloantigen-bearing target. To determine whether the anti-K562 and allospecific killing were mediated by the same effector cells or different cell populations, both targets were tested simultaneously in the single cell assay. At no time during the 7 days were cells detected capable of simultaneously binding both K562 and allospecific targets. These data indicate that there are two different cell populations responsible for allospecific cytotoxicity and MLC-induced NK-like cytotoxicity. The cytotoxic specificity of unstimulated and MLC-generated NK-like cells was also investigated. When two different NK-sensitive targets (e.g., K562 and MOLT-4) were tested together in the single cell assay, there was no concurrent binding of targets by either fresh PBL prior to MLC stimulation or Day 3 MLC-generated cells. When unstimulated effector cells were enriched for NK activity by Percoll density gradient centrifugation, only a small number of effector cells simultaneously binding two different NK-sensitive targets was detected in the single cell assay. These results imply that the NK cell population is heterogeneous and composed of subpopulations recognizing diverse target specificities.  相似文献   

8.
Murine spleen natural killer (NK) cells from normal and Toxoplasma-infected BALB/c mice were examined for their reactivity against RH strain tachyzoites in vitro. First, the effect of suspending medium on survival of extracellular RH tachyzoites was determined. Optimal parasite viability (by ethidium bromide-acridine orange staining) was observed when tachyzoites were incubated in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 10% horse serum (HS) for as long as 5 hr. In addition, parasite viability in PBS-HS correlated with subsequent infectivity, because freshly harvested and PBS-HS-incubated tachyzoites were equivalent in their ability to cause lethal infections in normal mice and to survive within normal mouse macrophages. Furthermore, viability and tumoricidal capacity of murine spleen NK cells incubated in PBS-HS was comparable to that of NK cells incubated in a standard cytotoxicity medium. Incubation of effector NK cells and target tachyzoites in PBS-HS in vitro revealed that spleen NK cells from 3-day Toxoplasma-infected mice had significantly greater cytotoxicity for extracellular RH tachyzoites than did control cells from uninfected mice. Moreover, Toxoplasma gondii-induced spleen NK cell toxoplasmacidal activity was significant at all effector to target cell ratios tested, and appeared to be mediated by direct contact between the host cell and the parasite. These in vitro results suggest that NK cells may be important in host defense against T. gondii.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) on natural killer (NK) cell activity of human lymphocytes was examined. The addition of an emulsion of trieicosapentaenoyl-glycerol (EPA-TG) emulsified with purified phosphatidylcholine from krill to a cytotoxicity assay system resulted in a marked depression of NK activity. The inhibition was proportional to the concentration of EPA-TG emulsion, and was observed as early as the first one hour of incubation at various effector to target cell ratios. Pretreatment of effector cells with EPA-TG emulsion resulted in significant suppression of their NK activity. Inhibition of cytotoxicity was not due to direct toxicity to effector cells or decreased target cell binding. These results indicate that EPA is a potent inhibitor of NK activity in vitro.  相似文献   

10.
The ability of adherent peritoneal cells (APC) to inhibit murine natural killer (NK) cell activity was examined. Nylon wool-nonadherent splenic effector cells were incubated overnight with or without different numbers of APC. NK activity was then measured against YAC-1 in a 4-hr 51Cr-release cytotoxicity assay. Proteose peptone-elicited or unstimulated resident APC from normal mice markedly suppressed NK activity of splenic effector cells in the presence or absence of exogenously added interferon. The suppression was dependent on the number of APC added with 10% APC, relative to the number of effector cells, resulting in a greater than 65% inhibition of cytotoxicity. The effector phase of cytotoxicity was not the target of the suppressor cells, because APC did not suppress NK activity when they were present only during the cytotoxicity assay. The addition of APC to alloimmune cytotoxic T cells under similar conditions resulted in no inhibition of cytotoxicity. Both syngeneic and allogeneic APC suppressed NK activity, but several murine macrophage-like cell lines lacked this property. In contrast to APC, incubation of effector cells with adherent spleen cells from normal mice resulted in no inhibition of NK activity. APC from mice injected with C. parvum were less inhibitory for NK activity than normal resident APC. In contrast, C. parvum APC suppressed concanavalin A-induced lymphoproliferation and were directly cytotoxic to tumor target cells in vitro, whereas normal APC lacked these properties. The results indicate that the peritoneum of untreated mice contains suppressor cells that can inhibit the in vitro maintenance and IFN-mediated augmentation of NK activity. In addition, these results indicate a broader spectrum of immune reactivities regulated by APC and suggest that, depending on their level of activation, APC can preferentially inhibit different immune functions.  相似文献   

11.
Paclitaxel, a semisynthetic taxane, is one of the most active chemotherapeutic agents for the treatment of patients with breast cancer. We focused on the effect of paclitaxel on the cytotoxicity of natural killer (NK) cells. NK cells were purified by negative selection with magnetic beads from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of healthy volunteers. A human breast carcinoma cell line BT-474 and an NK cell–sensitive erythroleukemia cell line K562 were used as targets. Cytotoxicity of NK cells was determined by 51Cr-release assay with labeled target cells. Paclitaxel (1–100 nM) did not affect cellular viability, and significantly enhanced cytotoxicity of NK cells in a dose-dependent manner. Although paclitaxel did not affect Fas-ligand expression of NK cells, paclitaxel induced mRNA and protein production of perforin, an effector molecule in NK cell–mediated cytotoxicity. Concanamycin A, a potent inhibitor of the perforin-mediated cytotoxic pathway, inhibited paclitaxel-dependent NK cell–mediated cytotoxicity. Furthermore, paclitaxel induced activation of nuclear factor B (NF-B) in NK cells. NF-B inhibitor pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate significantly suppressed both paclitaxel-induced perforin expression and NK cell cytotoxicity. Our results show for the first time that paclitaxel enhances in vitro cytotoxicity of human NK cells. Moreover, our results suggest a significant association between enhanced NK cell cytotoxicity, increased perforin production, and NF-B activation.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Our studies and other investigations have shown that NK effector cells can also mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) through the use of the Fc gamma receptor on the NK cell membrane. Peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) derived from patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and AIDS-related complex exhibit a poor NK activity due to a defective "trigger" required for activation in the lethal hit stage of the NK lytic pathway. Consequently, it was important to delineate whether the defect in AIDS NK cells affected the ADCC function. By using the 51Cr-release assay, the ADCC cytotoxic activity of AIDS PBL was found to be within the normal range, despite the absence of significant NK activity. Several experiments corroborated that the same effector cells mediate both NK CMC and ADCC. Depletion of Fc gamma R-bearing cells resulted in elimination of both the ADCC and NK cytotoxic functions. Single cell analyses, using one- and two-target cell conjugates, revealed that the frequency of ADCC effector:target conjugates and the frequency of killer cells from AIDS PBL were comparable to the frequencies seen in the normal controls. However, when mixtures of NK and ADCC targets were used to form mixed two-target conjugates, the AIDS effector cells lysed only the bound ADCC target, whereas the normal effector cells lysed both the bound NK and ADCC targets. These results demonstrate clearly that the same NK/K effector cells from AIDS PBL, defective in NK activity, are not impaired in mediating ADCC activity. These findings were supported by the demonstration that AIDS PBL stimulated with ADCC targets, but not with NK targets, released NK cytotoxic factors, postulated mediators of the NK CMC reaction. These findings indicate that the NK/K cells in AIDS are triggered normally for ADCC activity but are not triggered for NK activity. Furthermore, the results indicate that the lytic machinery is not impaired in the AIDS NK/K cells.  相似文献   

14.
Role of interferon in natural kill of HSV-1-infected fibroblasts   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The production of interferon during natural killer (NK) assays against HSV-1-infected fibroblasts (NK(HSV-1)) was studied to determine whether this interferon was responsible for inducing the preferential lysis of herpes-virus-infected target cells over uninfected target cells. The interferon produced during NK(HSV-1) assays was analyzed and found to have the properties of HU-IFN-alpha. Little or no IFN was produced during NK assays against uninfected fibroblasts (NK(FS)) or K562 (NK(K562)) cells. Although the appearance of interferon in the culture supernatants seemed to parallel the development of cytotoxicity during NK(HSV-1) assays, the levels of cytotoxicity and IFN generated did not correlate, arguing against a strict quantitative dependence of cytotoxicity upon IFN production. NK(K562) and NK(FS) cytotoxicity developed with little or no production of IFN. When IFN-pretreated effector cells were used, there was still a preferential lysis of infected over uninfected target cells. This preferential lysis by IFN-treated effector cells of infected over uninfected targets was seen as early as 2 hr into the assay. Anti-IFN antibodies added to the NK assays, although neutralizing all the IFN produced during the assays, had no effect on NK(FS) or NK(K562) cytotoxic activity and caused a slightly reduction of NK(HSV-1) activity only in one of three experiments. We conclude that although IFN is generated during NK(HSV-1) assays, this IFN cannot solely account for the increased lysis of infected over uninfected cells and that NK(HSV-1) activity is in some other way dependent on the virus infection.  相似文献   

15.
Mechanism of cell contact-mediated inhibition of natural killer activity   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Natural killer cell activity is inhibited by primary cultures of monolayer cells. In this study, we analyzed the mechanism of the inhibition. Inhibited NK cells showed unaltered binding capacity to NK sensitive K562 cells. The orientation of the effector cells' actin-containing microfilaments, an event known to occur during the programming for the lysis stage in lytic conjugates, was unaffected by the inhibition. In single cell cytotoxicity experiments, the number of killer cells among conjugate-forming cells was reduced. The capacity of the inactivated NK cells to secrete cytotoxic factors upon stimulation with Con A was also impaired. Both NK-resistant inactivating target cells and NK-sensitive K562 cells were sensitive to the toxic factors secreted by NK cells. Thus, the results indicate that the target cell-mediated inactivation of NK cell is based on a block in the lethal hit stage, possibly due to reduced release of toxic factor(s) from the effector cells. The capacity of inactivated effector cells to mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity was unimpaired, suggesting that the contact-mediated inhibition of cytotoxicity selectively affects NK cells.  相似文献   

16.
A highly purified preparation of lipomodulin, a phospholipase-inhibitory protein from rabbit neutrophils treated with glucocorticoids, inhibited NK and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) activities of human peripheral blood lymphocytes in a dose-dependent manner. The presence of lipomodulin during the early period of the cytotoxicity assay was necessary to obtain maximal inhibition. The inhibition of NK or ADCC activity by lipomodulin was greater when effector cells were treated with lipomodulin than when target cells were incubated with lipomodulin. As lipomodulin did not block binding of effector cells to target cells, our results suggest that lipomodulin inhibits the cytolytic phase of NK and ADCC activities after binding to target cells, and imply that phospholipase(s) may be involved in NK and ADCC activities.  相似文献   

17.
Addition of serotonin to mixtures of target cells and natural killer (NK)-enriched human mononuclear cells (MNC) in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay strongly augmented NK cell cytotoxicity (NKCC) vs K562, Chang, or Molt-4 target cells. The effect was dose dependent at serotonin concentrations of 10(-4) to 10(-7) M, expressed at several effector to target cell ratios, and required the presence of accessory monocytes. A 5-HT1-specific receptor agonist, 8-OH-DPAT, mimicked the enhancing properties of serotonin with similar potency. Equimolar concentrations of the mixed 5-HT1/5-HT2 receptor antagonist cyproheptadine, but not the 5-HT2-specific antagonist ketanserin, completely blocked the serotonin-induced NKCC enhancement. Monocyte/NK cell mixtures incubated with serotonin for 1 hr produced a soluble factor that could enhance the cytotoxicity of autologous, NK-enriched cells depleted of monocytes, which did not respond to serotonin alone. The factor displayed no IFN or IL 2 activity as judged by the lack of antiviral activity and inability to support the growth of an IL 2-dependent cell line. In the presence of monocytes, serotonin (10(-5) M) was considerably more effective than human IFN-alpha or IFN-gamma at optimal concentrations and was about equally effective as IL 2 at a final concentration of 50 U/ml in a short-term NK assay. The potency and efficacy for serotonin were similar to that earlier reported for histamine in monocyte-containing effector cells. The NKCC-enhancing effect of serotonin was additive to that induced by IFN-alpha, IFN-gamma, or IL 2, but not to histamine. The presented data suggest an earlier unrecognized, serotonin receptor-mediated regulation of human NK cells.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, we examined the functional status of human natural killer (NK) cells after their direct interaction with the NK-sensitive tumor target cell (TC), K562. Human peripheral blood lymphocytes depleted of adherent cells were incubated for 4 hr with unlabeled K562 cells at an effector cell (EC) to TC ratio of 2:1. After incubation, the EC were separated from the TC via centrifugation over a single-step Percoll gradient. K562-treated and separated EC were subsequently shown to be unable to lyse fresh K562 TC when retested in the standard chromium-release assay. Kinetic studies revealed that greater than 90% inactivation of NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity (CMC) could be achieved within 2 hr. Inactivation of NK-CMC by K562 was not caused by a specific loss of NK cells, as detected by changes in the expression of two NK cell-associated markers, Leu-7 and Leu-11, or to alterations in EC viability and target binding cell capacity. Interestingly, NK inactivation also occurred in medium devoid of extracellular calcium, although parallel testing of NK-CMC in the same medium resulted in no chromium release. NK inactivation, however, was significantly prevented when the EC and TC were co-incubated at 4 degrees C, or in medium without magnesium. Additional studies revealed that inactivation of NK-CMC could be achieved with another NK-sensitive, but not with an NK-resistant TC. Overall, we demonstrated that NK cells rapidly lost their lytic potential after direct interaction with a sensitive TC, although the cells remained viable, expressed the same percentage of Leu-7 and Leu-11, and could still bind the TC; and NK inactivation occurred in the absence of extracellular calcium, but not when EC and TC were incubated in medium without magnesium. These latter results provide evidence for an early event in the activation of human NK cells that is binding dependent, temperature sensitive, and independent of extracellular calcium.  相似文献   

19.
Neutrophils and mononuclear cells (MNC) can mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) against cancer cells. To study cytotoxicity and growth inhibition of neuroblastoma cells by neutrophils and MNC with chimeric anti-disialoganglioside (GD2) monoclonal antibody (mAb) ch14.18, we developed digital image microscopy scanning (DIMSCAN) assays that measure fluorescence of target cells in 96-well plates after 6–18 h (cytotoxicity assay) or 7 days (growth assay). Neuroblastoma cell lines (GD2-positive: SMS-KCN, SMS-LHN, LA-N-1; GD2-negative: SK-N-SH) were preloaded with calcein acetoxymethyl ester for the cytotoxicity assay or labeled in situ after 7 days of culture with fluorescein diacetate in the growth assay. Fluorescence, as quantified by DIMSCAN, was correlated with neuroblastoma cell number in both assays (100–2000 cells/well). In the cytotoxicity test, both neutrophils and MNC effectively mediated ADCC of GD2-positive but not GD2-negative neuroblastoma cell lines. Cytotoxicity of both neutrophils and MNC increased with effector to target cell (E:T) ratio (5–50:1) and mAb ch.14.18 dose (0.1–10 μg/ml). ADCC of neutrophils, but not MNC, increased with addition of GM-CSF. Neutrophils, especially with rhGM-CSF, significantly suppressed growth of GD2-positive cell lines at a high E:T ratio (50:1) and mAb dose (10 μg/ml). Without antibody, neutrophils inhibited growth of one cell line (LA-N-1) but stimulated growth of two others (SMS-KCN, SMS-LHN). If neuroblastoma cells did not express GD2 (SK-N-SH), neutrophils stimulated growth whether or not antibody was present. Neutrophil culture supernatants increased growth of SK-N-SH, LA-N-1, and SMS-KCN cells, and MNC culture supernatants increased growth of SK-N-SH. In conclusion, neutrophils can mediate cytotoxicity and growth inhibition with a chimeric anti-GD2 antibody but also can promote tumor cell growth if antibody is not present or if GD2 is not expressed. Received: 18 November 1998 / Accepted: 24 September 1999  相似文献   

20.
The effector cell in mouse spleen which mediates natural cytotoxicity against mouse hepatitis virus (MHV)-infected target cells was characterized. The target cells were MHV-infected BALB/c 3T3, and the assay time was 3 hr. The effector cell, designated virus killer (VK) cell for the purpose of discussion, had the following phenotype: lymphocyte morphology, plastic-nonadherent, nylon wool-adherent, nonphagocytic, cyclophosphamide-sensitive; by antibody plus complement (C) depletion studies, it was asialo GM1-, NK 1.2 alloantigen-negative, Thy-1.2-, Lyt-5-, and macrophage antigen-negative; by rosetting techniques, it was Fc receptor-positive and surface Fab+; by flow cytometry (FACS) analysis, it was Lyt-2-, MAC-1-, Ia+, IgG (gamma)+, IgM (mu)+, IgD (delta)+, and B cell lineage antibody B-220+. NK cells, measured for cytotoxicity on YAC-1 cells, were similarly tested and were found to differ from the VK cell in the following properties: nylon wool-nonadherent, asialo GM1+, NK alloantigen-positive, Lyt-5+, surface Fab-, MAC-1+, Ia-, IgG-, IgM-, IgD-, and B-220-. The VK effector cell had a phenotype highly distinguishable from NK cells, effectors most commonly associated with antiviral natural cytotoxicity. The VK cell had a phenotype identical to that of a B lymphocyte and was identified as such. Although the effector cells displayed cell surface antibody, the antibody did not appear to be involved in lysis, because lysis could not be blocked by F(ab)'2 directed against Fab, mu, or delta. Cytotoxicity was more likely associated with recognition of the B lymphocyte surface by the MHV glycoprotein E2, as shown in the accompanying companion paper. This is the first demonstration that natural cytotoxicity can be mediated by B lymphocytes.  相似文献   

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