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1.
The present investigation demonstrates that leukoregulin, a cytokine secreted by natural killer (NK) lymphocytes up-regulates the sensitivity of tumor cells to lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell cytotoxicity. It has been previously established that leukoregulin increases the sensitivity of sarcoma, carcinoma and leukemia cells to natural killer (NK) cell cytotoxicity. Tumor cells were treated with leukoregulin for 1 h at 37 degrees C and tested for sensitivity to NK and LAK cytotoxicity in a 4-h chromium-release assay. NK-resistant Daudi, QGU and C4-1 human cervical carcinoma cells became sensitive to NK cytotoxicity after leukoregulin treatment, and their sensitivity to LAK was increased two- to sixfold. Y-79 retinoblastoma cells, which are moderately sensitive to NK and very sensitive to LAK, became increasingly sensitive (two- to four-fold) to both NK and LAK cell cytotoxicity. Recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), recombinant interleukin-1 (alpha and beta), recombinant interferon gamma, recombinant tumor necrosis factor or combinations of the latter two failed to up-regulate tumor cell sensitivity to NK and LAK cell cytotoxicity. However, treatment with recombinant interferon gamma for 16-18 h, GM-CSF and interleukin-1 beta for 1 h induced a state of target cell resistance to both NK and LAK cell cytotoxicity. Leukoregulin may have an important physiological function in modulating NK and LAK cell cytotoxicity by increasing the sensitivity of target cells to these natural cellular immunocytotoxicity mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
Osteosarcoma and Ewing’s sarcoma tumor cells are susceptible to IL15-induced or antibody-mediated cytolytic activity of NK cells in short-term cytotoxicity assays. When encountering the tumor environment in vivo, NK cells may be in contact with tumor cells for a prolonged time period. We explored whether a prolonged interaction with sarcoma cells can modulate the activation and cytotoxic activity of NK cells. The 40 h coculture of NK cells with sarcoma cells reversibly interfered with the IL15-induced expression of NKG2D, DNAM-1 and NKp30 and inhibited the cytolytic activity of NK cells. The inhibitory effects on receptor expression required physical contact between NK cells and sarcoma cells and were independent of TGF-β. Five days pre-incubation of NK cells with IL15 prevented the down-regulation of NKG2D and cytolytic activity in subsequent cocultures with sarcoma cells. NK cell FcγRIIIa/CD16 receptor expression and antibody-mediated cytotoxicity were not affected after the coculture. Inhibition of NK cell cytotoxicity was directly linked to the down-regulation of the respective NK cell-activating receptors. Our data demonstrate that the inhibitory effects of sarcoma cells on the cytolytic activity of NK cells do not affect the antibody-dependent cytotoxicity and can be prevented by pre-activation of NK cells with IL15. Thus, the combination of cytokine-activated NK cells and monoclonal antibody therapy may be required to improve tumor targeting and NK cell functionality in the tumor environment.  相似文献   

3.
LFA-1 contributes an early signal for NK cell cytotoxicity   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Cytotoxicity of human NK cells is activated by receptors that bind ligands on target cells, but the relative contribution of the many different activating and inhibitory NK cell receptors is difficult to assess. In this study, we describe an experimental system that circumvents some of the difficulties. Adhesion through beta2 integrin LFA-1 is a common requirement of CTLs and NK cells for efficient lysis of target cells. However, the contribution of LFA-1 to activation signals for NK cell cytotoxicity, besides its role in adhesion, is unclear. The role of LFA-1 was evaluated by exposing NK cells to human ICAM-1 that was either expressed on a Drosophila insect cell line, or directly coupled to beads. Expression of ICAM-1 on insect cells was sufficient to induce lysis by NK cells through LFA-1. Coexpression of peptide-loaded HLA-C with ICAM-1 on insect cells blocked the LFA-1-dependent cytotoxicity of NK cells that expressed HLA-C-specific inhibitory receptors. Polarization of cytotoxic granules in NK cells toward ICAM-1- and ICAM-2-coated beads showed that engagement of LFA-1 alone is sufficient to initiate activation signals in NK cells. Thus, in contrast to T cells, in which even adhesion through LFA-1 is dependent on signals from other receptors, NK cells receive early activation signals directly through LFA-1.  相似文献   

4.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM/CD56) is a member of the Ig supergene family that has been shown to mediate homophilic binding. Several isoforms of N-CAM have been identified that are expressed preferentially in different tissues and stages of embryonic development. To examine the primary structure of N-CAM expressed in leukocytes, N-CAM cDNA were generated by polymerase chain reaction from RNA isolated from normal human NK cells and the KG1a hematopoietic leukemia cell line. The sequence of leukocyte-derived N-CAM cDNA was essentially identical with N-CAM cDNA from human neuroblastoma cells that encode the 140-kDa isoform of N-CAM. Inasmuch as N-CAM is preferentially expressed on human NK cells and a subset of T lymphocytes that mediate MHC-unrestricted cell-mediated cytotoxicity, we examined the potential role of N-CAM in cell-mediated cytotoxicity and heterotypic lymphocyte-tumor cell adhesion. N-CAM loss mutants were established from the human N-CAM+ KG1a leukemia cell line, and N-CAM cDNA was transfected into a human colon carcinoma cell line and murine L cells. Using this panel of mutants and transfectants, it was determined that expression of N-CAM on these target cells does not affect susceptibility to resting or IL-2-activated NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Moreover, expression of N-CAM in these transfectants failed to induce homotypic or heterotypic cellular adhesion. Collectively, these studies indicate that homophilic N-CAM interactions probably do not mediate a major role in the cytolytic interaction between NK cells and N-CAM+ tumor cell targets.  相似文献   

5.
We evaluated the effect of the antibodies to adhesion molecules CD2, CD11a/CD18 (LFA-1), and CD56 (N-CAM) on MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity mediated by polyclonal NK cells and LAK cells or by CD3+ or CD3- cytolytic cell clones against a panel of tumor cell targets selected according to expression or absence of the corresponding ligands. We show that (i) antibodies to CD11a/CD18 and, to a lesser extent, antibodies to CD2 inhibit target cell lysis, whereas anti-CD56 antibodies exert little if any effect; (ii) in a model system using polyclonal NK/LAK cells as effectors and K562 or HL60-R (NK-resistant) cells as targets, inhibition of cytotoxicity occurs without a significant impairment of effector to target cell binding; (iii) the cytotoxic function of CD3+ or CD3- cytotoxic cell clones is inhibited differentially by antibodies to adhesion molecules; (iv) conjugates formed in the presence of antibodies which inhibit target cell lysis display a significant reduction of target to effector cell contact surface; and (v) this may lead to defective activation of effector cells, as indicated by lack of redistribution of the microtubular apparatus. We conclude that (i) MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity is regulated by a number of molecular interactions that span far beyond our present knowledge and that it is strictly dependent on the surface phenotype of the effector cell and of the target cell; (ii) in certain types of effector/target cell interactions, antibodies to adhesion molecules do not prevent conjugate formation but reduce the extent of cell-to-cell surface contact which, in turn, leads to defective activation of the effector cell and, therefore, to inhibition of target cell lysis.  相似文献   

6.
Here, we present data suggesting a novel mechanism for regulation of natural killer (NK) cell cytotoxicity through inhibitory receptors. Interaction of activation receptors with their ligands on target cells induces cytotoxicity by NK cells. This activation is under negative control by inhibitory receptors that recruit tyrosine phosphatase SHP-1 upon binding major histocompatibility class I on target cells. How SHP-1 blocks the activation pathway is not known. To identify SHP-1 substrates, an HLA-C-specific inhibitory receptor fused to a substrate-trapping mutant of SHP-1 was expressed in NK cells. Phosphorylated Vav1, a regulator of actin cytoskeleton, was the only protein detectably associated with the catalytic site of SHP-1 during NK cell contact with target cells expressing HLA-C. Vav1 trapping was independent of actin polymerization, suggesting that inhibition of cellular cytotoxicity occurs through an early dephosphorylation of Vav1 by SHP-1, which blocks actin-dependent activation signals. Such a mechanism explains how inhibitory receptors can block activating signals induced by different receptors.  相似文献   

7.
The ability of NK cells to synthesize and secrete fibronectin (FN), an extracellular matrix glycoprotein which plays a key role in many biologic processes including cellular adhesion, morphology, cytoskeletal organization, cell migration, and invasiveness, was studied. By using affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies directed against human cellular or plasma FN, the presence of FN was evidentiated on Percoll-purified rat large granular lymphocyte or on a large granular lymphocyte tumor cell line (CRC) by flow cytometry and immunoelectron microscopy. Its expression increased after NK cell activation by poly I:C administration. Biochemical analysis by immunoprecipitation and SDS-PAGE indicated that FN was associated to cell surface and secreted in the supernatant in a molecular form similar to that of FN from L929 fibroblasts. In an attempt to understand the role of FN in the NK cell function, we found that an antibody against human plasma FN and its F(ab')2 fragment inhibited NK cytotoxicity against YAC-1 target at the effector cell level. Inhibition occurred at the postbinding level, because F(ab')2 anti-FN inhibited induction of phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis by YAC-1 target cells, whereas binding to target cells was not affected. The possible role of FN in the NK cytotoxic function is suggested.  相似文献   

8.
The role of beta1 (CD29) integrins in natural killer (NK) cell-target cell conjugation and cytotoxicity has not been clearly established. Ligation of beta1 integrins in NK cells can modulate the lytic capacity in both a positive and a negative manner; however, the contribution of the beta1 integrins present on target cells remains to be evaluated. Here, we analyzed the effect of beta1 integrins expressed by potential tumor target cells on conjugation and cytotoxicity. Using normalized flow cytometry binding assays, we demonstrated that the pretreatment of MOLT-4, K562, U-937 and HL-60 human leukemia target cell lines with selected anti-beta1 monoclonal antibodies (mAb) increased conjugation to human NK cell line NKL as well as to purified NK cells. Only mAb recognizing residues 207-218 of the beta1 subunit and functionally involved in the induction of homotypic adhesion (functional epitope A1) increased conjugation of all the target cells. Moreover, mAb to adhesion molecules different from beta1 but also inducers of homotypic adhesion of the target cells, i.e. CD43 and CD50 (ICAM-3), failed to increase conjugation to NKL cells. Cytotoxicity assays demonstrated that lysis of NK-sensitive target cells (MOLT-4) also increased after pretreatment with anti-beta1 epitope A1 mAb. Importantly, pretreatment of NK-resistant target cells (U-937 and HL-60) with anti-beta1 mAb was not able to outweigh the cytotoxic inhibitory mechanisms controlled by HLA class I molecules. However, simultaneous masking of HLA class I molecules with mAb and pretreatment with anti-beta1 mAb rendered NK-resistant cells susceptible to lysis, as predicted by the missing self hypothesis. Triggering of tumor target cells through beta1 integrins may thus play a role in conjugation to NK cells as well as in co-stimulation of cell-mediated cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

9.
Elotuzumab is a monoclonal antibody in development for multiple myeloma (MM) that targets CS1, a cell surface glycoprotein expressed on MM cells. In preclinical models, elotuzumab exerts anti-MM efficacy via natural killer (NK)-cell-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). CS1 is also expressed at lower levels on NK cells where it acts as an activating receptor. We hypothesized that elotuzumab may have additional mechanisms of action via ligation of CS1 on NK cells that complement ADCC activity. Herein, we show that elotuzumab appears to induce activation of NK cells by binding to NK cell CS1 which promotes cytotoxicity against CS1(+) MM cells but not against autologous CS1(+) NK cells. Elotuzumab may also promote CS1–CS1 interactions between NK cells and CS1(+) target cells to enhance cytotoxicity in a manner independent of ADCC. NK cell activation appears dependent on differential expression of the signaling intermediary EAT-2 which is present in NK cells but absent in primary, human MM cells. Taken together, these data suggest elotuzumab may enhance NK cell function directly and confer anti-MM efficacy by means beyond ADCC alone.  相似文献   

10.
Although NK cells can kill both malignant cells and virus-infected cells without prior sensitization, it has remained unclear whether the mechanism by which an NK cell is activated in the presence of a tumor cell is similar to that induced by the presence of a virus-infected cell. In our experimental system using homogeneous populations of cloned human CD16+ NK cells, we found that HSV-infected target cells do not induce in the NK cells the same pharmacologically-active second messengers elicited by NK-sensitive tumor cells. Although phosphoinositide turnover and calcium signaling were generated in NK cells exposed to NK-sensitive tumor cells, the recognition of HSV-infected cells by NK cells did not result in similar transmembrane signaling. Furthermore, depending on the cell type infected by HSV, alternative mechanisms of cytotoxicity were employed. HSV-infected foreskin fibroblasts were rapidly and selectively killed by cloned NK cells without a requirement for IFN or accessory cells. In contrast to this direct cytotoxicity against HSV-infected foreskin fibroblasts, NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity against an HSV-infected fibrosarcoma cell line (1591) was dependent on IFN-alpha production by accessory cells. Importantly, in both systems of cytotoxicity, IFN-alpha activation of NK cells resulted in augmented killing against both infected and uninfected targets. These results suggest that NK cell activation induced during antiviral immunity is distinct from activation elicited during an antitumor response. These differences include the utilization of alternative forms of signal transduction and alternative mechanisms of cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

11.
Temporal changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]i, of resting human peripheral blood NK cells in response to target cell binding were evaluated by flow cytometry. [Ca2+]i was significantly elevated in PBL and purified NK cells bound to NK-sensitive K562 and HSB2 target cells, but not in those bound to NK-resistant MD1 B-lymphoblastoid cells. Thus, a) the ability of a target cell to elicit a Ca2+ flux response correlated with its sensitivity to lysis of NK cells, and b) adhesion alone was not a sufficient stimulus for response induction. Conjugates of NK cells bound to K562 target cells were sorted onto agarose-coated slides on the basis of relative NK cell [Ca2+]i and evaluated in 19-hr single cell agarose cytotoxicity assays. In contrast to those with basal levels of [Ca2+]i, NK cells with elevated [Ca2+]i bound more strongly to target cells, as judged by the stability of conjugates to sort-related shear forces (p less than 0.01), and more frequently killed the target cell to which they were attached (p less than 0.05). Temporal fluctuations in [Ca2+]i were observed in target-bound NK cells in both the presence and absence of extracellular Ca2+. Thus, influx of extracellular Ca2+ and release of Ca2+ from internal stores both appeared to contribute to the NK cell Ca2+ flux response triggered by adhesion to appropriate target cells. These results support the hypothesis that such fluctuations in NK cell [Ca2+]i constitute an early signal flagging the occurrence of NK cell recognition.  相似文献   

12.
NK cells are key components of the immune response to virally infected and tumor cells. Recognition of target cells initiates a series of events in NK cells that culminates in target destruction via directed secretion of lytic granules. Ral proteins are members of the Ras superfamily of small GTPases; they regulate vesicular trafficking and polarized granule secretion in several cell types. In this study, we address the role of Ral GTPases in cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Using a human NK cell line and human primary NK cells, we show that both Ral isoforms, RalA and RalB, are activated rapidly after target cell recognition. Furthermore, silencing of RalA and RalB impaired NK cell cytotoxicity. RalA regulated granule polarization toward the immunological synapse and the subsequent process of degranulation, whereas RalB regulated degranulation but not polarization of lytic granules. Analysis of the molecular mechanism indicated that Ral activation in NK cells leads to assembly of the exocyst, a protein complex involved in polarized secretion. This assembly is required for degranulation, as interference with expression of the exocyst component Sec5 led to reduced degranulation and impaired cytotoxicity in NK cells. Our results thus identify a role for Ral in cell-mediated cytotoxicity, implicating these GTPases in lymphocyte function.  相似文献   

13.
Here we investigate the activation of and a possible role for the hematopoietic Rac1 exchange factor, Vav, in the signaling mechanisms leading to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Our data show that direct contact of NK cells with a panel of sensitive tumor targets leads to a rapid and transient tyrosine phosphorylation of Vav and to its association with tyrosine-phosphorylated Syk. Vav tyrosine phosphorylation is also observed following the activation of NK cells through the low-affinity Fc receptor for IgG (Fc gamma RIII). In addition, we demonstrate that both direct and Ab-mediated NK cell binding to target cells result in the activation of nucleotide exchange on endogenous Rac1. Furthermore, Vav antisense oligodeoxynucleotide treatment leads to an impairment of NK cytotoxicity, with Fc gamma RIII-mediated killing being more sensitive to the abrogation of Vav expression. These results provide new insight into the signaling pathways leading to cytotoxic effector function and define a role for Vav in the activation of NK cell-mediated killing.  相似文献   

14.
NK cells play an important role in the early immune response to cancer. The NKp44 activating receptor is the only natural cytotoxicity receptor that is expressed exclusively by primate NK cells, yet its cellular ligands remain largely unknown. Proliferating cell nuclear Ag (PCNA) is overexpressed in cancer cells. In this study, we show that the NKp44 receptor recognizes PCNA. Their interaction inhibits NK cell function through NKp44/ITIM. The physical interaction of NKp44 and PCNA is enabled by recruitment of target cell PCNA to the NK immunological synapse. We demonstrate that PCNA promotes cancer survival by immune evasion through inhibition of NKp44-mediated NK cell attack.  相似文献   

15.
Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is a critical protein for the regulation of integrin-mediated cellular functions and it can enhance cell motility in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells by hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) induction. We utilized optical trapping and cytodetachment techniques to measure the adhesion force between pico-Newton and nano-Newton (nN) for quantitatively investigating the effects of FAK on adhesion force during initial binding (5 s), beginning of spreading (30 min), spreadout (12 h), and migration (induced by HGF) in MDCK cells with overexpressed FAK (FAK-WT), FAK-related non-kinase (FRNK), as well as normal control cells. Optical tweezers was used to measure the initial binding force between a trapped cell and glass coverslide or between a trapped bead and a seeded cell. In cytodetachment, the commercial atomic force microscope probe with an appropriate spring constant was used as a cyto-detacher to evaluate the change of adhesion force between different FAK expression levels of cells in spreading, spreadout, and migrating status. The results demonstrated that FAK-WT significantly increased the adhesion forces as compared to FRNK cells throughout all the different stages of cell adhesion. For cells in HGF-induced migration, the adhesion force decreased to almost the same level (approximately 600 nN) regardless of FAK levels indicating that FAK facilitates cells to undergo migration by reducing the adhesion force. Our results suggest FAK plays a role of enhancing cell adhesive ability in the binding and spreading, but an appropriate level of adhesion force is required for HGF-induced cell migration.  相似文献   

16.
IFNalpha regulates NK cell cytotoxicity through STAT1 pathway   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Liang S  Wei H  Sun R  Tian Z 《Cytokine》2003,23(6):190-199
  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The poliovirus receptor (PVR) belongs to a large family of Ig molecules called nectins and nectin-like proteins, which mediate cell-cell adhesion, cell migration, and serve as entry receptors for viruses. It has been recently shown that human NK cells recognize PVR through the receptor DNAM-1, which triggers NK cell stimulation in association with beta(2) integrin. In this study, we show that NK cells recognize PVR through an additional receptor, CD96, or T cell-activated increased late expression (Tactile). CD96 promotes NK cell adhesion to target cells expressing PVR, stimulates cytotoxicity of activated NK cells, and mediates acquisition of PVR from target cells. Thus, NK cells have evolved a dual receptor system that recognizes nectins and nectin-like molecules on target cells and mediates NK cell adhesion and triggering of effector functions. As PVR is highly expressed in certain tumors, this receptor system may be critical for NK cell recognition of tumors.  相似文献   

19.
Phospholipase A2 (PA-2) is known to be involved in many calcium-dependent cellular processes and inhibitors of PA-2 have been shown to inhibit natural killer cell-mediated cytotoxicity (NK CMC). Since the trigger stage is calcium dependent, it was postulated that this effector cell-associated enzyme may play a role in early calcium-dependent processes. To define how PA-2 might be involved in NK lysis, the effect of both PA-2 inhibitors and exogenous PA-2 on the stages of NK lysis was examined. PA-2 inhibitors, quinacrine and p-bromophenacyl bromide, inhibited NK CMC at the effector cell level, but affected neither initial target-effector cell binding nor dissociated conjugates during the length of the NK assay, suggesting that they block post-binding lytic events. A calcium pulse assay showed that PA-2 inhibitors inhibit only moderately when added after calcium and only within the first 15 min, demonstrating that these inhibitors blocked very early post-binding lytic events. Because this very early post-binding inhibitory effect was consistent with effects upon the NK trigger mechanism, the effect of exogenous PA-2 on NK lysis was tested. Pretreatment of K562 target cells but not pretreatment of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) with 20 units/ml PA-2 enhanced lysis by two to eight-fold (based upon lytic units), showing its enhancing effect to be at the target cell level. Single cell assays using effector cells purified by indirect panning with monoclonal antibody NKH-1 showed that only the number of killer cells was increased. Calcium pulse assays showed that enhancement of lysis was maximum 15 min after addition of calcium and decreased rapidly thereafter, demonstrating its effect at an early post binding stage. Additionally, PA-2 was shown to overcome inhibition by the monoclonal antibody 13.3, which has been shown to affect the trigger stage of NK lysis (post-binding but prior to calcium dependent events). Thus, it appears that an NK cell-associated PA-2 could function by modulating the target cell surface, revealing a structure which acts as a "secondary" trigger, subsequent to the 13.3 "trigger", requisite for activation of the NK lytic process.  相似文献   

20.
Natural killer (NK) cells target and kill tumor cells by direct anti-tumor cytotoxicity. NK lytic-associated molecule (NKLAM) is a protein involved in this cytolytic function. Acting as an E3 ubiquitin ligase, NKLAM binds to and ubiquitinates a novel protein, uridine-cytidine kinase like-1 (UCKL-1), targeting it for degradation. However, UCKL-1’s function in tumor cell survival and NK cell cytotoxicity is unknown. UCKL-1’s homology to uridine kinases and over expression in tumor cells suggests a role for UCKL-1 in tumor growth and/or survival. We propose that NKLAM and UCKL-1 interact in the tumor cell, where degradation of UCKL-1 leads to increased tumor cell apoptosis. Here we use RNA interference to downregulate UCKL-1 expression in K562 erythroleukemia cells. It was seen that downregulation of UCKL-1 initiated apoptosis and slowed the cell cycle, resulting in lower growth in the small interfering UCKL-1 RNA treated K562 cell culture. In addition, the chemotherapeutic agent staurosporine was seen to be more effective in inducing cell death by apoptosis in UCKL-1 depleted K562 cells compared with controls. We also found that UCKL-1 depleted K562 cells were more susceptible to NK mediated cytolysis than controls. These results indicate a role for UCKL-1 in tumor cell survival and suggest possible therapeutic potential of UCKL-1 inhibitors in cancer treatment.  相似文献   

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