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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
Two cytotoxic assays, lectin-dependent cytotoxicity and natural killer (NK) cytotoxicity, were used to assess the competence of cord blood and neonatal peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) and T-cell cytotoxic reactions. The effect of exogenous interferon was also studied. Results were compared with cytotoxic capabilities of adult cells and cells from patients with primary immunodeficiency syndromes. Lectin-dependent cytotoxicity (LDCC), a property of both T and non-T cells, was assessed by lysis of chromium-labeled EL4 tumor target cells in the presence or absence of exogenous fibroblast interferon (IFN-β). Natural killer cytotoxicity was assessed by lysis of two different chromium-labeled tumor target cells, Molt 4f and K562 in the presence or absence of IFN-β. Lectin-dependent cytotoxicity (LDCC) of PBMC of cord blood (32 ± 4% SEM) and adult cells (36 ± 2% SEM) were equivalent but neonatal cells had slightly decreased LDCC (22 ± 3% lysis). T-depleted cells from cord or neonatal blood had increased LDCC but T-enriched (>95% sheep erythrocyte rosette-forming cells) from both cord (22 ± 3%) and neonatal blood (18 ± 5%) had significantly reduced LDCC compared to 55 ± 2% for adult T cells. This deficiency corrects with age and is near normal after age 2. Preincubation with IFN-β did not enhance LDCC of newborn or adult cells. The LDCC of some cord T cells was markedly reduced and was in the same low range as patients with severe combined immunodeficiency. Natural killer (NK) cytotoxicity of PBMC from cord and adult cells was equivalent at three effector:target ratios against the Molt 4f target but against the K562 target, cord PBMC had significantly less NK activity (22 ± 11 SD) compared to adult NK activity (50.5 ± 22.2 SD) at a 50:1 effector:target ratio. Similar differences were noted at 25:1 and 10:1 target:effector ratios. NK cytotoxicity against Molt 4f targets of adult cells was significantly enhanced by preincubation with IFN-β but NK of cord cells was only variably enhanced. By contrast, IFN-β enhanced NK against K562 targets of both adult and cord cells, adult greater (67.7 ± 20) than cord cells (37.8 ± 2.0). These T-cell effector deficiencies are in marked contrast to the vigorous proliferative responses of newborn T cells, and parallel deficiencies of certain neonatal lymphokines. These defects may explain the newborns' enhanced susceptibility to intracellular viruses and to congenital viral infections.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The monoclonal antibodies, VEP10 and OKT10, which have been shown to recognize determinants on human natural killer (NK) cells, inhibit large granular lymphocyte (LGL) NK activity against K562, MOLT4, and CEM tumor target cells in the single cell conjugate agarose assay. Inhibition of NK activity by monoclonal antibodies was expressed independently of effector-target cell binding, as inhibitory activity could be demonstrated when the monoclonal antibodies VEP10 and OKT10 were added to preformed conjugates or to the LGLs and targets prior to the binding event. In addition, this inhibition was exerted on the effector cell and not the target cell since VEP10 and OKT10 did not react with determinants on K562 target cells. Furthermore, the 4F2 monoclonal antibody, which reacted with determinants on the LGL and all of the targets used, effected no inhibition of NK activity. Inhibition of killing by OKT10 and VEP10 was specific to endogenous NK activity since the same antibodies did not inhibit antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), mixed lymphocyte-generated NK, or cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activities.  相似文献   

7.
Treatment of PBL or Percoll-isolated LGL with anti-transferrin antibodies plus complement reduced their natural killing activity against K-562 cells between 30 and 70%. The same antibodies inhibited natural cytotoxicity when added directly to the assay. Similar depletion or inhibition of NK cytotoxicity was observed when using HeLa cells as targets. The decrease or inhibition by transferrin antibodies was less marked when IFN-treated PBL or LGL as effector cells were used. The inhibition of anti-transferrin antibodies seems to be located at the level of the effector cell population. When PBL but not target K-562 cells were pretreated with anti-transferrin antibodies and were washed before use in the assay, cytotoxicity was decreased by 50%. In addition, about 80% of the LGL positively selected on anti-transferrin plates stained with Leu-11. Furthermore, no reduction by anti-transferrin antibodies plus complement treatment of PBL or LGL, or inhibition by antibodies alone, was observed when the cells were tested against HSV-1-infected cells. Membrane extracts from LGL inhibited NK cytotoxicity against K-562 or HeLa cells. Moreover, the inhibitory component of this extract was removed by anti-transferrin IgG but not by control IgG. These results are in agreement with the recent hypothesis that NK cells recognize the transferrin receptor in tumor target cells, because both the transferrin receptor and anti-transferrin antibodies may share a similar structure that interacts with the NK cells.  相似文献   

8.
Cytotoxic effector cells mediating natural killing (NK), antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), and lectin-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (LDCC) were studied in patients with leukemia or aplastic anemia before and/or after marrow transplantation. Before transplantation, about one-third to one-half of the patients were deficient in cytotoxic activity. In patients with leukemia, this was most likely due to large numbers of circulating blast cells diluting or replacing the effector cells. In patients with aplastic anemia there was an apparent absence of the effector cells in a proportion of the patients. After marrow transplantation, cytotoxic activity in all three systems returned to normal rapidly, by 30 days, and remained so through 100 days. However, about 20% of patients studied beyond 1 year were deficient in these functions. There were no significant associations between cytotoxic activity and important clinical parameters including infections, graft-vs-host disease, and recurrence of leukemia. Our findings do not support an immunosurveillance role for NK against leukemia after marrow transplantation. Furthermore, they point out the need for new in vitro approaches for meaningful monitoring of marrow transplant patients. Finally, our results showed a significant discordance between NK, ADCC, and LDCC activities in these immunologically perturbed individuals, indicating that either different cell populations or different cellular mechanisms are involved in these cytotoxic functions.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of Parotis virus on antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity in vitro (ADCC) of human lymphocytes was investigated in a 51Cr-release assay and, at the effector cell level, in an ADCC plaque assay. Target cells were bovine or chicken erythrocytes, which are not susceptible to natural cytotoxicity (NK) of human lymphocytes. They were not killed when incubated with virus-treated lymphocytes in the absence of antibodies. Treatment of the lymphocytes or the target cells with small amounts of virus, however, resulted in a very significant enhancement of ADCC. The same results were obtained with live or UV-inactivated virus, suggesting that enhancement was a passive phenomenon not requiring infection. Enhancement was already significant after 3 hr of incubation, indicating that it was independent of endogenously released interferon. Enhancement of ADCC by virus was due to effector cell recruitment rather than due to the increase of the cytotoxic potential of the individual K cell. The highest frequency of effector cells was present in Percoll fractions enriched in large granular lymphocytes (LGL). Virus treatment resulted in recruitment of effector cells carrying T cell markers such as the T3 antigen (OKT3+), receptors for sheep erythrocytes, or Fc receptors for IgM. In contrast, the absolute number of K cells carrying the HNK-1 marker (Leu-7) or receptors for C3 fragments was not changed by the virus. It is concluded that Parotis virus enhances ADCC by improving effector cell-target cell contacts, resulting in recruitment of effector cells with T cell characteristics. Recruitment is accompanied by a significant reduction of the antibody concentration needed for ADCC induction. This virus-mediated enhancement of ADCC may be of importance for protection of the host in the early phases of a virus infection in which the amounts of anti-viral IgG antibodies capable of inducing cellular cytotoxicity may yet be very small.  相似文献   

10.
Antigenically different subpopulations of human large granular lymphocytes (LGL) were identified according to their reactivity with monoclonal antibodies (MoAb). Antigen-positive and -negative subsets were isolated by immunoaffinity columns using a Sepharose 4B gel coupled with F(a')2 goat anti-mouse IgG or by flow cytometry cell sorting. The distinct LGL subsets were tested for natural killer (NK) activity against a panel of tumor targets: K562, Daudi, Alab; and for antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) against antibody-coated RL male 1 cells. LGL positively selected for any of the following phenotypic markers: B73.1+, OKM1+, OKT11+, and OKT10+ were highly cytotoxic, while B73.1- and OKM1- cells were completely devoid of NK activity. The OKT10- and OKT11- LGL subsets were occasionally cytotoxic, with low levels of reactivity. LGL subpopulations were also tested in a limiting dilution assay (LDA) for their capacity to proliferate in medium supplemented with interleukin 2 (IL-2) and to develop NK-like cytotoxic activity. The majority of proliferative progenitors have the following phenotype: OKT11+, OKM1-, B73.1-, and OKT10-, while the majority of progenitors for cytotoxic cells were OKT11+, OKM1+/-, OKT10+, and B73.1-. Results indicate that although B73.1+ cells can grow, the mature B73.1+ NK cells seem to be primarily derived in vitro from a small subset of less differentiated B73.1 pre-NK progenitors in the peripheral blood lymphocytes.  相似文献   

11.
Characteristics of human NK clones: target specificity and phenotype   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Clones derived from purified human large granular lymphocytes (LGL) of three different donors were expanded in culture medium supplemented with interleukin 2 (IL 2). Their cytotoxic activity was tested in a 51Cr-release cytotoxicity assay against a panel of three to five NK-susceptible tumor cell lines. Of 196 LGL clones tested, only 44 (22.4%) displayed significant cytotoxic activity. A heterogeneous pattern of reactivity was seen; 26 clones (59%) killed all the targets within the panel tested, whereas 18 clones (41%) had a more restricted specificity. Among these 18 clones, 12 lysed only one target (K562, six clones; ADCC, three clones; Daudi, two clones; MOLT-4, one clone), whereas the other six killed two different targets (ADCC and A1ab, one clone; K562 and MOLT-4, five clones). Clones derived from LGL preselected for positive reactivity with the monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) alpha OKM1, alpha OKT10 and alpha B73.1 also demonstrated either broad or restricted patterns of cytotoxicity. The LGL reactive with MoAb alpha B73.1 gave a high percentage of cytotoxic clones. Phenotype analysis showed that clones could express both antigens associated with T cells (i.e., OKT3, OKT4, and OKT8) and antigens shared by LGL (i.e., OKM1, OKT10, and B73.1). The pattern of surface markers varied considerably among the clones; however, no clear correlation between the pattern of antigenic phenotype and cytotoxic activity was seen. These data show that clones derives from purified preparations of LGL present different functional and antigenic characteristics, and support the hypothesis that the heterogeneity of the entire NK population is attributable, at least in part, to a mixture of clones that vary substantially in their target specificities and phenotypes.  相似文献   

12.
We examined the effect of carrageenan on in vitro antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytolysis (ADCC) and spontaneous cell-mediated cytolysis (SCMC) in cultures of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBL). Carrageenan, when present in the assay, nonspecifically reduced ADCC and SCMC against both Chang and chicken erythrocyte (CRBC) target cells. This reduction in cytotoxicity could not be attributed entirely to the macrophage toxic and complement-inhibitory properties of carrageenan because neither removal of complement nor macrophage depletion prevented the dose-dependent inhibition. In contrast, pretreatment of effector PBL, with carrageenan followed by removal of Carrageenan by washing did not alter ADCC or SCMC against Chang cells, which are mediated by nonphagocytic cells, but reduced both ADCC and SCMC activity against CRBC targets, which are mediated in part by macrophages. Thus, Carrageenan, when present in in vitro cell-mediated cytotoxicity assays, causes a nonspecific impairment of cytotoxicity that is independent of its anticomplement or macrophage-toxic properties.  相似文献   

13.
K 562 cells induced to differentiate by sodium butyrate (SB) or 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) were studied for their capacities to be bound and killed by large granular lymphocytes (LGL) in a single-cell cytotoxicity assay in agarose. After SB treatment, K 562 cells were less efficient in binding to LGL, whereas the frequency of killer cells among bound LGL was unaffected. When TPA was used to induce K 562 differentiation, the binding of LGL to their target and the lytic efficiency of the bound LGL were both diminished when compared to control K 562 cells. It has been demonstrated that the expression of structures involved in the binding of natural killer (NK) effectors to their targets could be correlated with the target-differentiation stage. It is shown that phorbol-ester treatment can also affect NK target structures involved in the killing step.  相似文献   

14.
The in vitro effect of histamine and its antagonists, cimetidine and clemastine fumarate, on natural killer (NK) and antibody-dependent cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) activities of human lymphocytes was investigated. The histamine 1 (H1) antagonist, clemastine fumarate, and the histamine 2 (H2) antagonist, cimetidine, but not histamine alone, inhibited the NK and ADCC activities of lymphocytes when added directly to the mixture of effector and target cells in a 51Cr-release assay. This inhibition was proportional to the concentration of drugs added and was observed at various effector to target ratios against several targets. H1 and H2 antagonists also inhibited NK activities of T cells as well as Percoll-separated, NK-enriched effector cells. The inhibition was significantly reversed by histamine. In target binding assays, clemastine fumarate and cimetidine also decreased the target binding capacity of effector lymphocytes. Further, PBL precultured with histamine (10?3–10?4M) for 24 hr showed a significant decrease in their NK and ADCC activities. In coculture experiments, PBL precultured with histamine suppressed the NK activity of normal autologous effector lymphocytes. PBL precultured with histamine showed an increased number of OKT8+ cells, as estimated using monoclonal antibodies. The suppression of Cytotoxicity was not due to either direct toxicity, steric hindrance, crowding, or cell death, but by functionally viable suppressor cells. An immunoregulatory role for histamine in NK and ADCC reactions is proposed.  相似文献   

15.
The in vitro effect of prednisolone (PRD) on NK and ADCC activities of human lymphocytes was investigated. PRD at concentrations ranging from 7.5 X 10(-3) to 1 X 10(-5) M significantly inhibited NK activity, while concentrations of 7.5 X 10(-3) to 1 X 10(-4) M inhibited ADCC activities of PBL when added directly to the mixture of effector and target cells. Lymphocytes pre-cultured for 24 hr with PRD at concentrations ranging from 1 X 10(-4) M to 1 X 10(-6) M showed significant suppression of their NK activity. Inhibition was proportional to the concentration of the drug, and was observed at as early as 1 hr of incubation at various effector to target cell ratios with several targets. PRD also inhibited NK and ADCC activities of purified T cells, non-T cells, and NK-enriched effector cells. In target-binding assays, PRD decreased the target-binding capacity of effector lymphocytes in a dose-dependent manner. PRD-induced inhibition could be reversed by incubating lymphocytes for 1 hr with interferon or IL 2. Pretreatment of targets with PRD for 4 hr did not affect cytotoxic activity. Inhibition of cytotoxicity was not due to direct toxicity to effector cells because lymphocytes treated with PRD showed normal spontaneous 51Cr release, and their viability after 24 hr of pre-culture with PRD was comparable to that of untreated control cells. These results demonstrate that PRD has significant immunomodulatory effects on human NK and ADCC activities that may be of clinical relevance.  相似文献   

16.
The incubation of human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) with the natural killer (NK)-sensitive MOLT-4 cell line results in PBL-target cell conjugate formation by certain lymphocyte subpopulations. Following velocity sedimentation, the PBL depleted of these conjugate-forming subpopulations are markedly diminished in the ability to mediate either antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) or NK activity. The immediate testing of highly pure PBL subpopulations isolated from the NK target conjugates does not reveal the expected recovery of augmented ADCC or NK levels. Following in vitro incubation, however, the PBL NK target-binding subpopulations do manifest augmented levels of both NK and ADCC, whereas the depleted PBL continue to display diminished NK and ADCC levels. In addition, the degree of augmented NK and ADCC levels recovered by the NK target-binding PBL subpopulations appears dependent on both the time and the temperature of in vitro incubation. Moreover, the ADCC recovery patterns are identical to those observed for NK activity regardless of the time and temperature of in vitro incubation. These results directly demonstrate that the PBL subpopulations isolated from certain NK target cells are functionally enriched in the ability to mediate from ADCC and NK activity.  相似文献   

17.
The role of the low avidity 40,000 dalton receptor for IgG (Fc gamma R) present on K562 and U937 cells in sensitivity to natural killing (NK) was studied by using a murine monoclonal antibody (mAb) specific for the 40,000 dalton Fc gamma R (alpha Fc gamma R mAb). Pretreatment of K562 target cells with intact alpha Fc gamma R mAb or its Fab fragment or anti-transferrin receptor (alpha TFR) mAb partially blocked in a dose-dependent manner, NK activity to K562 cells. However, combined pretreatment with alpha Fc gamma R and alpha TFR mAb completely blocked NK activity against K562 targets. As compared with K562 cells, lower levels of NK were elicited against Molt-4, U937, HL-60, and Daudi targets. Although NK activity to Molt-4 targets was not affected by alpha Fc gamma R mAb, it was fully prevented by pretreatment with alpha TFR mAb. In contrast, NK to U937 cells was not influenced by alpha TFR mAb, but it was strongly inhibited by alpha Fc gamma R mAb. The resistance of 3H-TdR-prelabeled adherent HEp-2 cells to natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity was not affected by either mAb. Lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC) against HEp-2 cells due to the presence of concanavalin A, and was completely abrogated by pretreatment of the targets with alpha TFR mAb, but was unaffected by alpha Fc gamma R mAb. By use of the flow cytometer, a significant correlation was detected between the relative expression of 40,000 dalton Fc gamma R and the susceptibility to NK, whereas the expression of TFR was discordant from NK sensitivity. As determined in the single cell cytotoxicity assay alpha Fc gamma R mAb reduced the frequency of target binding effector cells without affecting the number of dead bound targets. This pattern of inhibition was found against both K562 and U937 targets. Alternatively, alpha TFR mAb inhibited both binding and killing of K562 and Molt-4 targets. Because pretreatment of HEp-2 cells with alpha TFR mAb did not influence conjugate formation, the blocking of LDCC to HEp-2 cells by alpha TFR mAb can be related to post-binding events. These data show that although both the 40,000 dalton Fc gamma R and the TFR can be target structures for NK cell recognition, the TFR may also play an important role in the post-binding events.  相似文献   

18.
A monoclonal antibody, termed PNK-E, that functionally enhances porcine natural killer (NK) cell activity but not antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) is investigated in this report. When PNK-E and K562 target cells were simultaneously added to effector cells, killing of target cells could be detected as early as 30 min, and a dramatic enhancement of killing activity was observed in short term 51Cr-release assays. When a panel of five NK-sensitive targets were tested, PNK-E enhanced the killing of K562, MOLT-4, and U937 cells, but not the killing of CEM and YAC-1. F(ab)'2 fragments of PNK-E did not enhance NK activity, indicating a requirement for the Fc portion of PNK-E to elicit enhancement of NK. Immunofluorescence analysis shows that PNK-E antigen is expressed on approximately 15% of peripheral blood lymphocytes with a relatively dull fluorescence staining pattern. PNK-E-positive sorted cells were enriched for large granular lymphocytes (LGL) and contained all detectable NK activity as compared to the PNK-E-negative sorted cells. When analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, PNK-E antibody immunoprecipitated a protein from 125I-labeled peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) cell lysates that resolved as a single band of approximately 205 kDa under nonreducing conditions and as two bands of approximately 50 kDa and 47 kDa under reducing conditions. The present data demonstrate a functional association between PNK-E antigen and NK cell activation.  相似文献   

19.
Cord blood lymphocytes (CBL) were compared with adult peripheral blood lymphocytes (a-PBL) for their: (i) natural killer (NK) and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxic (ADCC) activities, (ii) target-binding capacity, (iii) ability to induce soluble natural killer cytotoxic factor (NKCF), (iv) interferon (IFN)-, interleukin 2 (IL-2)-, and lectin-induced augmentation of NK activity, and (v) ability to produce IFN against tumor targets in vitro. CBL depleted of adherent cells and Percoll-separated, NK-enriched subpopulations demonstrated significantly lower NK, ADCC, and target-binding activities compared to a-PBL. CBL produced significantly lower levels of NKCF directed against K562 tumor targets in comparison with a-PBL. Although the NK activity of CBL was not stimulated by either IFN or IL-2 to the same levels shown by a-PBL, the percentage enhancement of cytotoxicity of CBL by IFN and IL-2 was greater than that of a-PBL. Lectin-induced enhancement of cytotoxicity was significantly greater for CBL in comparison with a-PBL. Further, the ability of CBL lymphocytes to produce IFN-gamma in vitro against K562 target cells was significantly lower than that of adult PBL. These studies suggest an association between decreased NK, ADCC, and target-binding activities, induction of NKCF and IFN production by CBL, and increased susceptibility of neonates to infection.  相似文献   

20.
The mechanism of lymphocyte-mediated cytotoxicity to cells infected with measles virus was investigated. Cytotoxicity was measured in a direct assay, immediately after the isolation of lymphocytes from human peripheral blood; mononuclear leukocytes, infected with measles virus in vitro, served as autologous target cells. Virus-specific cytotoxicity required the presence of both IgG antibodies against measles virus and of effector lymphocytes. The effector lymphocytes had Fc receptors and were mainly present in a fraction of non-T lymphocytes. Monocytes were not cytotoxic but rather inhibitory. These results indicate that lysis of virus-infected cells in this direct assay is due to antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), caused by K cells. Control experiments showed that the virus-infected target cells were sensitive to incubation with human serum or IgG, resulting in a nonspecific increase of 51Cr release; however, this did not affect the results of K-cell cytotoxicity. Maximal virus-specific lysis by ADCC did not reach the level obtained by complement-dependent cytotoxicity. Possible explanations for this difference are discussed.  相似文献   

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