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1.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) cultured in a medium containing interleukin 2 (IL 2) develop the ability to kill fresh tumor cells. This function has been termed lymphokine activated killing (LAK). Recently, cord LAK cell activity was demonstrated to be equally as cytotoxic against similar in vitro targets as adult (peripheral) LAK cells. We investigated the future therapeutic use of LAK adoptive immunotherapy by examining LAK in vitro cytotoxicity from both cord and peripheral blood mononuclear cells against pediatric malignant tumor cell lines Y-79 (retinoblastoma). Cord LAK cells show higher levels of cytotoxicity toward Y-79 targets than do adult LAK cells. Attempts to enhance the rIL 2-induced LAK activity by addition of rIFN-gamma or PSK (krestin) were successful. Furthermore, we found that PSK has a function to enhance rIL 2-induced IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha production. These findings suggest that combined administration of cord LAK cells and PSK may account for the improvement of advanced retinoblastoma in the neonatal period.  相似文献   

2.
The generation of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells in vitro has been reported to require 100-1000 units of recombinant interleukin-2 (IL2). In this study we investigated the generation of human LAK cells with low-dose IL2 (1-10 U) in combination with human tumor cell lines. A significant LAK activity was generated within 3- to 5-days culture of PBL. Among six human tumor cell lines tested, the K562 cell line had the greatest stimulating activity, and the degree of cytotoxicity was comparative to that of PBL stimulated with higher doses of IL2 alone. The origin of this LAK activity was primarily the E(-) rosetting cell population. Cocultures of E- cells with 1 U/ml IL2 plus K562 had significantly higher cytotoxicity (P less than 0.05) compared to using E+ cells. Phenotypic analysis indicated that 1 U/ml IL2 plus K562 cell stimulation enhanced CD56+ and CD16+ cells. These studies suggest that very low dosages of IL2 with stimulator tumor cells can generate LAK activity comparable to that generated with high dosages of IL2 alone.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of adherent cell depletion, indomethacin, and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) on murine LAK cell activity were investigated. Removal of plastic adherent cells from splenocyte suspensions either prior to 5-day culture with 1000 U/ml of recombinant human IL-2 (rIL-2) or prior to assay resulted in an enhanced LAK cell cytotoxicity compared to that of whole spleen cell suspensions. Indomethacin enhanced LAK cell cytotoxicity of whole splenocyte suspensions if present during the culture period, but had no effect on whole splenocyte or adherent cell-depleted cell suspensions if added just prior to assay. PGE2 suppressed LAK cell activity of nonadherent splenocyte but not whole splenocyte suspensions when present during the culture period. In vivo treatment of mice with indomethacin enhanced cytotoxicity directed toward both LAK sensitive, natural killer (NK) resistant (P-815) and LAK, NK sensitive (YAC-1) tumor cell targets. Splenocytes from indomethacin-treated mice cultured with additional indomethacin and rIL-2 exhibited highest LAK cell activity. The results from this study indicate that LAK cells are regulated by adherent cells which suppress LAK cell activity. This suppression can be reversed both in vitro and in vivo by indomethacin. This study has important implications for the possible clinical use of indomethacin in the potentiation of in vivo and in vitro LAK cell activity for immunotherapeutic protocols.  相似文献   

4.
Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells were generated successfully without mitogen from blood mononuclear cells obtained from 14 patients with varying malignancies and 2 normal donors. Cells from both groups showed a positive cytotoxicity by a 4-hour 51-Cr-release assay against a variety of target cells including natural killer (NK) sensitive K562 myeloid leukemia, NK-resistant Raji lymphoma cell lines, and fresh/cryopreserved leukemia cells from patients refractory to standard chemotherapy but not normal blood cells. Higher cytotoxic activity was obtained with a higher effector:target ratio at 100:1 greater than 50:1 greater than 25:1 (P less than 0.01) in each setting of different targets. Experiments involving cocultures of the LAK cells with either allogeneic (9) or autologous (3) bone marrow cells disclosed no detrimental effect on the committed hemopoietic stem cells by semisolid agar colony forming unit (CFU-GM) assay. The findings suggest that LAK cells may have a potential role for the in vitro purging of the residual leukemic cells from the marrow inoculum prepared for autologous bone marrow transplantation.  相似文献   

5.
It is known that IL-2 induces lymphocytes to produce interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and this IFN type is particularly efficient in inducing tumor cell resistance to natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis. We have investigated the effect of IFN on tumor cell sensitivity to LAK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Pretreatment of the human K562 leukemia and HHMS melanoma with IFN-gamma and the Daudi lymphoma with IFN-alpha caused a significant reduction in sensitivity to lysis by human LAK cells generated in vitro in the presence of human recombinant IL-2 (100 U/ml). The LAK activity was mediated by cells expressing NK cell markers (CD16,NKH1) as well as by cells with T cell markers (CD3, CD5). IFN-treated K562 cells were protected from lysis mediated by all these populations. Supernatants from LAK cultures containing IFN-gamma were able to induce NK and LAK resistance when used to pretreat K562 overnight. Antibodies to IFN-gamma but not to IFN-alpha were able to neutralize this activity. Taken together, these results indicate that the production of IFN-gamma by LAK cells may be of importance in induction of tumor cell resistance to LAK cell-mediated lysis.  相似文献   

6.
Accumulating evidence suggests the concept that epirubicin and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells cytotoxicity may be mediated by free radicals generation and P-glycoprotein-positive (Pg-p+) cancer cells are more sensitive for LAK cells than their drug-sensitive parental lines. We tested this hypothesis further by exposing drug-sensitive (WT) and epirubicin-resistant MCF-7 human breast tumor cells to epirubicin and LAK cells. Subsequently, we monitored cell proliferation as a measure of cytotoxicity. The cytotoxicity of epirubicin, LAK, and LAK + epirubicin (1/10 of IC50) was evaluated in 400-fold epirubicin resistant MCF-7 EPIR (P-glycoprotein overexpressing) and drug-sensitive MCF-7 WT cells. IC50 values were measured using the MTT cytotoxicity test. The MCF-7 EPIR cells exhibited an increased susceptibility to LAK cells than did the MCF-7 WT cells. P-gp+ MCF-7 EPIR cells were lysed by human LAK cells to a greater extend than were their drug-sensitive counterparts. LAK + epirubicin combined treatment increased susceptibility of MCF-7 WT and MCF-7 EPIR cells to LAK cells cytotoxicity. For both cell lines, cytotoxicity was dependent upon the concentration of the epirubicin and effector cell/target cell (E/T) ratio. The resistance of MCF-7 EPIR cells to epirubicin appears to be associated with a developed tolerance to superoxide, most likely because of a tree-fold increase in superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and 13-fold augmented selenium dependent glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activity. Acting in concert, these two enzymes would decrease the formation of hydroxyl radical from reduced molecular oxygen intermediates. The addition of SOD decreased cytotoxicity of epirubicin and LAK cells. Taken together, these observations support the role of oxygen radicals in the cytotoxicity mechanism of epirubicin and suggest further that the development of resistance to this drug by the MCF-7 EPIR tumor cells may have a component linked to oxygen free radicals. It is proposed that production of reactive oxygen species by the treatment of epirubicin and LAK cells can cause cytotoxicity of MCF-7 WT and MCF-7 EPIR cells. SOD, catalase, GSH-Px, GST (glutathione S-transferase), and GSH (reduced glutathione) must be considered as part of the intracellular antioxidant defense mechanism of MCF-7 WT and MCF-7 EPIR cells against reactive oxygen species.  相似文献   

7.
The chimeric monoclonal antibody cG250 targets the G250 antigen, a transmembrane protein which is expressed on renal carcinoma cells and is identical to the MN/CAIX antigen. In vitro studies have previously demonstrated that cG250 induces antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) of G250-positive targets. In order to investigate the upregulation of ADCC mediated by cG250, ADCC was examined using effector cells cultured in the presence or absence of the cytokines interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), interferon-alpha isoforms IFN-alpha (2a) and IFN-alpha (2b) and interleukin-2 (IL-2), and the time course of effects over a 7-day period was determined. Renal cell carcinoma lines expressing high (SK-RC-52) and low (SK-RC-09) G250 antigen levels were used as target cells, and freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from a healthy donor were used as the effector cells. PBMC were incubated with the respective cytokine at a range of concentrations or with a media alone control for a period of 7 days. The ADCC activity mediated by cG250 or control isotype matched huA33 with the different PBMC treatment groups was assessed in triplicate daily. Corresponding lymphokine activated killing (LAK) activity was measured concurrently for each treatment group. Chimeric G250 specifically recognised G250 antigen on high and low expressing cell lines SK-RC-52 and SK-RC-09, and mediated specific in vitro ADCC of both lines. In the absence of cytokine stimulation, the specific ADCC of cG250 declined rapidly within three days. IL-2 strongly enhanced and maintained cG250-mediated ADCC activity and K562 cytotoxicity when applied to PBMC in culture for seven days. IFN-gamma also enhanced the ADCC of cG250 throughout the study period, but was not as effective as the IL-2 treatment, and the SK-RC-09 line displayed lower specific cytotoxicity than the SK-RC-52 cell line. In contrast, IFN-alpha 2a and 2b increased cG250-mediated ADCC and K562 cytotoxicity for only three days of the study period. The potent and sustained immune effector activity observed with cG250 and cytokines in this in vitro study suggests that the combination immunotherapy of cG250 with cytokines such as IL-2 shows promise in the treatment of renal cell carcinoma (RCC).  相似文献   

8.
J Xiao  Z Brahmi 《Cellular immunology》1989,122(2):295-306
In a previous study, we demonstrated that human natural killer cells (NK) lost their lytic activity after interaction with a sensitive target. The loss of NK activity also led to the loss of antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), prompting us to postulate that NK and ADCC activities may result from a common lytic mechanism. In this study, we examined whether nonadherent lymphocytes cultured 7 days in the presence of IL-2 (lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells) could also be inactivated and, subsequently, be reactivated in the presence of IL-2. We tested three populations of effector cells (EC): cells isolated from freshly drawn blood and tested immediately, cells cultured with IL-2 for 18 hr, and LAK cells. Once they have interacted with K562, all three cell populations lost greater than 90% of their NK-like lytic activity (NK-CMC) but only 80% of ADCC. However, when we treated the three cell types with antibody-coated K562, they lost 90-99% of NK-CMC and 90-97% of ADCC. In these inactivated effector cells we also observed: (i) a reduction in membrane expression of C-reactive protein; and (ii) a decrease in the expression of Leu-11a when EC were inactivated with antibody-coated K562. The loss of lytic activity against K562 was accompanied by a concomitant loss of activity against other LAK-sensitive targets as well as against antibody-coated targets (ADCC). In competitive inhibition experiments the inactivated effector cells failed to inhibit normal NK-CMC and ADCC activities mediated by fresh NK cells. As we have shown previously, this target-directed inactivation was not due to cell death or to lack of conjugate formation. Inactivated LAK cells regained their lytic potential when cultured with IL-2 and this effect was time dependent. By 72 hr, LAK cells inactivated with K562 regained 99% NK-CMC and 82% ADCC, whereas LAK cells inactivated with antibody-coated K562 regained only 80% NK-CMC and 70% ADCC. When we treated the effector cells with emetine, a potent inhibitor of protein synthesis, we could still inactivate the effector cells with K562 and with antibody-coated K562 but could not reactivate them with IL-2.  相似文献   

9.
By traditional definitions, NK cells can be activated by cytokines to exhibit two functionally distinct levels of cytotoxicity. Whereas IL-2-mediated activation of NK cells leads to the development of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cytotoxicity, characterized by the acquisition of cytolytic activity against NK-resistant targets, IFN-treated NK cells become activated without the acquisition of novel cytolytic specificities. In this study we show that NK cells activated by 18 to 24 h of stimulation with either IFN-alpha or IFN-gamma do acquire LAK cytolytic activity, demonstrated by the ability of IFN-treated PBMC to lyse NK-resistant COLO 205 cells as well as fresh tumor targets. The level of IFN-alpha-induced LAK activity was significantly greater than that induced by IFN-gamma, although IL-2-induced LAK activity was considerably greater than IFN-alpha-induced LAK cytotoxicity. Maximal IFN-induced LAK cytotoxicity occurred after 24 h of culture, and occurred with the use of IFN-alpha at 500 U/ml and IFN-gamma at 1000 U/ml. Whereas neutralizing antibody experiments demonstrated that IFN-alpha-induced LAK activation did not involve the participation of endogenously produced IL-2, the partial inhibition (63%) of IFN-gamma-induced LAK cytotoxicity by anti-IL-2 and of IL-2-induced LAK by anti-IFN-gamma (33.3%) indicates that the induction of LAK cytotoxicity by either of these individual cytokines involves the endogenous production and participation of the other cytokine. Similar to IL-2-induced LAK cells, phenotypic analysis revealed that IFN-alpha/gamma LAK cells were Leu-19+, although the Leu 19"dim"+ subset exhibited greater IFN-induced LAK activity than the Leu-19"bright"+ subset. The results of this study clearly demonstrate that IFN-alpha and IFN-gamma induce classic LAK activity and IFN-gamma plays a participatory role in the optimal induction of LAK cells by IL-2.  相似文献   

10.
The cytotoxic activity of NK cells is regulated by class I MHC proteins. Although much has been learned about NK recognition of class I autologous targets, the mechanisms of NK self-tolerance are poorly understood. To examine the role of a nonpolymorphic, ubiquitously expressed class Ib Ag, Q9, we expressed it on class I-deficient and NK-sensitive B78H1 melanoma. Presence of this Qa-2 family member on tumor cells partially protected targets from lysis by bulk lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells. H-2K(b)-expressing B78H1 targets also reduced LAK cell activity, while H-2D(b) offered no protection. Importantly, blocking with F(ab')(2) specific for Q9 or removal of this GPI-attached molecule by phospholipase C cleavage restored killing to the level of vector-transfected cells. Experiments with LAK cells derived from H2(b) SCID and B6 mice established that NK1.1(+)TCR(-) NK and NK1.1(+)TCR(+) LAK cells were the prevalent cytolytic populations inhibitable by Q9. Treatment of mice with poly(I:C) also resulted in generation of Q9-regulated splenic cytotoxicity. LAK cells from different mouse strains responded to Q9, suggesting that the protective effect of this molecule is not detectably influenced by Ly49 polymorphisms or the presence/absence of Q9 in NK-harboring hosts. We propose that Q9 expressed on melanoma cells serves as a ligand for yet unidentified NK inhibitory receptor(s) expressed on NK1.1(+) NK/T cells.  相似文献   

11.
Normal human alveolar macrophages (AM) significantly and reproducibly suppress induction of IL 2-activated killer (LAK) cell activity against allogeneic Burkitt's lymphoma (Daudi) cells. Incubation of purified peripheral blood lymphocytes for 4 days with autologous AM and 1 U/ml of IL 2 resulted in AM-mediated suppression of LAK activity, whereas peripheral blood monocytes isolated freshly by centrifugal elutriation from the same donor potentiated induction of LAK activity by IL 2. The suppression of LAK cell induction by human AM was dependent on the density of AM added to the lymphocyte cultures. Recombinant IFN-gamma did not affect AM-mediated suppression of LAK cell induction by IL 2. Both AM and monocytes stimulated with lipopolysaccharide markedly suppressed LAK cell induction by IL 2. AM-mediated down-regulation was seen only when AM were added immediately after the start of incubation of lymphocytes with IL 2; AM potentiated LAK activity when added 1 day later. Similar AM-mediated suppression of LAK cell induction was observed with four lines of allogeneic lung cancer cells as targets for LAK activity. These results indicate that AM may be important in regulation of in situ induction of LAK activity in the lung.  相似文献   

12.
Thymocyte-derived lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells were used as a model for the study of the cytokine driven development of cytotoxicity. These cells are devoid of initial cytotoxic activity but upon culture in IL-2 they develop into cytotoxic effectors. The parameters of the response of thymocytes to IL-6 are similar to that of PBL in that IL-6, at concentrations as low as 1 mu/ml, increases cytotoxicity of thymocyte-LAK cells when generated in low doses (25-50 mu/ml) of IL-2. IL-6-enhanced thymocyte-LAK cytotoxicity is observed when tested against both NK-resistant and NK-sensitive tumor cell lines. IL-6 alone does not induce any cytotoxicity from thymocytes nor does IL-6 change the time course of thymocyte-LAK cell generation in IL-2 culture. IL-6 does not affect DNA synthesis, total cell number, proportion of CD56+ cells, or the expression of IL-2R (both P55 and P75 glycoproteins) in IL-2-cultured thymocytes. Instead, IL-6 used to treat mature thymocyte-LAK effector cells for as little as 1 hr prior to 51Cr-release assay increases LAK cytotoxicity. This enhancement is abrogated by pretreatment of effector cells with cycloheximide, suggesting that protein synthesis is required for IL-6 to enhance LAK cell activity. The precursor phenotypes of IL-6-responsive thymocyte-LAK cells are CD3-/CD5-. The effector phenotypes of IL-6-enhanced thymocyte-LAK cells are CD5-/CD56+. Thus, IL-6 depends on synthesis of rapid-turnover proteins to act on mature CD56+/CD5- LAK cells to increase their cytotoxic function.  相似文献   

13.
This study showed that a mAb (145-2C11) against the T3 epsilon-chain of the TCR complex augmented the cytotoxic activity of the lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) effectors. The LAK cells were induced by culturing normal spleen cells with purified human rIL-2. Adding alpha T3 at the effector phase of the cytotoxic reactions augmented the LAK-mediated cytotoxicity. The alpha T3-augmented LAK killing was seen only with tumor targets, and there was no increase of killing against Con A-induced lymphoblasts. The augmentation effect was dose dependent on both the amounts of alpha T3 and the number of LAK cells added. A very low concentration of alpha T3 (1/10,000 dilution of culture supernatants) was sufficient to induce alpha T3-augmented LAK-mediated cytotoxicity. Human rIL-2 at 10 to 30 U/ml was sufficient to generate LAK cells for maximal alpha T3 augmentation, whereas 300 to 1000 U/ml of IL-2 were needed to generate maximal LAK activity when tested in the absence of alpha T3. LAK cells generated for longer periods of time showed a progressive increase of alpha T3-augmented cytotoxicity. For some targets, the alpha T3-augmented LAK killing was FcR dependent as evidenced by the ability of alpha FcR mAb 2.4G2 to inhibit, and for others it was not inhibited. The alpha T3-augmented killing did not correlate with the FcR expression on target cells as defined by 2.4G2. The LAK cells were both Lyt-2+ and Lyt-2-, but the LAK cells involved in alpha T3-augmented killing were exclusively Lyt-2+. Preincubation of LAK cells with alpha T3, but not preincubation of targets with alpha T3, resulted in augmented killing suggesting that the alpha T3 effect was unrelated to an antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Our findings indicate that alpha T3 is a potent reagent to augment the cytotoxic reaction of LAK cells. These results suggested that a relationship might exist between the T3 complex and the cytotoxic activity of a subpopulation of Lyt-2+ LAK cells.  相似文献   

14.
In this study we have examined the susceptibility of tumor cell lines exhibiting different patterns of resistance to chemotherapeutic agents, to the cytotoxic action of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and activated monocytes. The susceptibility of tumor cells with pleiotropic drug resistance to these cytotoxic mechanisms was not different from that of their parental, chemo-sensitive cell lines. Tumor lines used in this study included three human cell lines (LOVO N and LOVO/Dx, I-407 and I-407/Dx, MCF7 and MCF7a) selected for being resistant to doxorubicin and showing a pleiotropic pattern of resistance, and the murine ovarian reticulum cell sarcoma M5076 and its variants resistant to individual antitumor agents (cisplatin, cyclophosphamide and 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine). These results demonstrate that drug-resistant tumor cell lines, irrespective of the pattern of resistance, were susceptible to the in vitro cytotoxicity mediated by LAK cells and activated monocytes with levels of lysis similar to those of parental chemosensitive lines. Moreover, freshly isolated tumor cells from ovarian cancer patients unresponsive to different chemotherapeutic treatments (operationally drug-resistant) were significantly killed in vitro by LAK cells. These findings support the concept that activated effector cells have the potential to complement conventional chemotherapy by eliminating drug-resistant tumor variants.  相似文献   

15.
HER2/neu-overexpressing tumor cell lines are relatively resistant to lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell cytotoxicity when compared toHER2/neu-nonexpressing lines.HER2/neu + targets were also resistant to binding by LAK large granular lymphocytes (LGL) as shown by visualization at the single-cell level, a target monolayer binding assay and in cold target inhibition experiments.HER2/neu + LAK-resistant ovarian cell lines demonstrated an absence of ICAM-1 expression while expression of LFA-3, N-CAM, laminin and 1 integrins was comparable to that ofHER2/neu targets. In contrast, theHER2/neu + breast cell line, SKBR-3, which was also resistant to lysis and binding by LAK LGL, demonstrated normal expression of ICAM-1. Anti-ICAM-1 antibodies blocked binding and lysis ofHER2/neu carcinoma targets by LAK cells, further supporting the notion that lack of ICAM-1 expression onHER2/neu + cells contributes to their resistance. The modest binding and lysis ofHER2/neu + targets by LAK cells was significantly inhibited by anti-LFA-1 antibodies, suggesting the existence of another counter-receptor for LFA-1 onHER2/neu + targets. The following also supported deficiencies in post-binding events whenHER2/neu + cells resisted the lytic activity of LAK cells: (a) when the relative resistance to effector cell binding was overcome by exogenous lectin,HER2/neu + cell lines were still resistant to LAK cytolysis, and (b)HER2/neu + targets were resistant to perforin-containing granule extracts obtained from the CTLL-R8 cytotoxic lymphocyte cell line. These results indicate that deficiency in effector binding as well as post-binding events contributes to the resistance ofHER2/neu-overexpressing tumor targets to LAK-cell-mediated lysis.Supported by research funds of the Veteran's Administration, the California Institute for Cancer Research and Jonsson Cancer Center core grant CA 16042 funded by NIH  相似文献   

16.
Summary The natural killer (NK) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell activities of peripheral blood lymphocytes from chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients in remission and from healthy donors have been studied. Regression analysis to compare both cytotoxic responses in individual donors and the frequency of LAK cell precursors was also carried out. About 42% of CML patients in remission showed low NK activity (less than the mean percentage NK activity of healthy donors — 2 SD) and were categorised as low NK responders. The stage of remission or the drugs used to bring about remission did not influence the NK status. The LAK activity of low NK as well as normal NK responder CML patients was significantly low against the NK-sensitive K562 cell line and the NK-resistant VIP (melanoma) and T-24 (bladder carcinoma) tumor targets, as assessed by linear regression analysis. Allogeneic leukemic cells were more resistant to killing, especially by patients' LAK cells. The frequency analysis of LAK cell precursors revealed a significant reduction in the LAK cell progenitor frequency in CML patients in remission.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Chloroethylnitrosoureas have been used widely to treat human and experimental animal tumors. We have earlier observed that >90% of the mice transplanted with syngeneic tumors survive following treatment with nitrosoureas such as 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) and furthermore, they resist subsequent challenge with the same tumor. The present investigation was initiated to determine the mechanism by which BCNU brings about this effect. Treatment of tumor cell targets in vivo or in vitro with BCNU, increased their susceptibility to macrophage (MØ)-mediated cytotoxicity as measured in a direct cytotoxicity assay or in an antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) assay. In contrast, the antitumor cytotoxicity caused by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL), natural killer (NK) cells, or lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells, was not altered following BCNU treatment of tumor targets. Studies were also conducted to investigate the direct effect of BCNU in vivo on various cytotoxic effector cells. For this purpose, MØ, NK, LAK, and CTL activities from BCNU-treated-tumor-bearing mice were screened for cytotoxicity against untreated tumor targets in vitro. It was observed that tumor-specific CTL and LAK cell activity increased in BCNU-treated tumor-bearing mice when compared to untreated controls while the cytotoxic potential of NK cells and MØs was not altered. The present study suggests that antitumor drugs such as BCNU are not only tumoricidal but also selectively act in a variety of ways at both the effector and target cell level, leading to overall enhanced antitumor immunity and high rate of cures from the syngeneic tumor challenge.The work at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University was supported by NIH grants CA45009 and CA45010 and by a Biomedical Research Support Grant. The work at University of Kentucky was supported by NIH grants CA34052 and CA33629 and by a grant from the Tobacco and Health Institute  相似文献   

18.
Summary Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM) activated with recombinant interleukin-2 (IL-2) generate potent lytic activity (LAK) against a variety of malignant cells. IL-2 alone is sufficient for LAK generation, but high concentrations are needed to generate optimal cytotoxicity. Our recent studies based on combinations of biological agents indicated that alternative activation pathways may exist. Synergy for LAK induction was investigated using IL-2 and tumor necrosis factor- (TNF). Single-cell suspensions of primary human lung carcinomas were prepared from seven established cell lines and 32 fresh tumor specimens. Not only were all cell lines sensitive to allogeneic LAK, but also all fresh tumors were sensitive to some degree to both autologous and allogeneic LAK lysis measured by a 4-h 51Cr-release assay. LAK-mediated cytotoxicity, induced with a combination of human recombinant IL-2 (Cetus, 100 U/ml) and TNF (Genentech, 500 U/ml), showed a mean fourfold increase (range 0.7–16.3) over IL-2 alone. No lytic activity was generated from PBM incubated with media or TNF alone. The sequence dependence of adding IL-2 and TNF in enhancing cytolytic activity was also studied. In vitro kinetics data revealed that the addition of TNF 2–6 h before the addition of IL-2 greatly increased LAK activity over that obtained from the simultaneous addition of the two cytokines. These results demonstrated (a) the synergy of IL-2 and TNF for generating LAK; (b) the lysis of fresh primary lung cancer cells by LAK; and (c) the sequence dependence of IL-2 and TNF for the induction of optimal LAK activity.This work was supported by NCI Grants RO2-CA45225 and CAO 9611-01, and by an award from the Prouss Foundation  相似文献   

19.
Nonspecific cytotoxic responses such as natural killer activity can be increased in vitro by incubating effector cells with soluble factors or allogeneic cells. We sought to determine if newborn cells, known to be deficient in most cytotoxic responses, including resting NK activity, could develop enhanced cytotoxic responses following incubation with allogeneic cells (augmented cytotoxicity) or with lymphokines (lymphokine-activated cytotoxicity). Cord whole mononuclear cells (WMC) incubated with irradiated Raji cells for 5 days develop lower levels of cytotoxicity toward K562 targets at both a 20:1 effector:target (E:T) ratio (39 +/- 2.7% vs 49 +/- 3.6%) and a 10:1 E:T ratio (29 +/- 2.6% vs 40 +/- 3.6%) than do adult cells. Lessened specific cytotoxicity of cord cells developed toward the sensitizing Raji cells was also observed at both E:T ratios. Attempts to enhance the induced cytotoxicity by incubation with interferon or isoprinosine were unsuccessful. In contrast, lymphokine (i.e., interleukin 2)-activated killer (LAK) cytotoxicity is not deficient in cord WMC. Indeed, the level of LAK cytotoxicity is equivalent to that observed with similarly treated adult cells despite a lower baseline level of cytotoxicity toward the target cells. In the presence of purified IL-2 for 5 days, cord WMC cytotoxicity against K562 cells increased from 12 +/- 2.6 to 71 +/- 4.2% and against Raji cells increased from 9.6 +/- 2.5 to 48 +/- 6.7%. Similarly treated adult cells increased their killing against K562 from 23 +/- 4.2 to 61 +/- 4.5% and against Raji from 12 +/- 3.0 to 36 +/- 5.3%. This substantial lymphokine-activated cytotoxicity of newborn cells suggests the possibility of therapeutic intervention with purified lymphokines in neonatal infections or neoplasms.  相似文献   

20.
As previously reported, the culture of mouse spleen cells in the presence of high amounts of human rIL-2 for 4 days caused proliferation and generation of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells, which could lyse a variety of tumor cells. However, an addition of PMA to the culture resulted in a striking inhibition of the generation of LAK cells. In contrast, IL-2-induced cell proliferation, IL-2R expression, and LFA-1 expression were enhanced by the addition of PMA. Kinetic studies revealed that the addition of PMA during the final 24 h, but not 4 h, of the culture was sufficient to inhibit the generation of LAK cells. The same inhibition of LAK activity was observed when 4-day cultured LAK cells were pretreated with PMA for over 12 h before cytotoxicity assay. Flow cytometry analysis showed that PMA pretreatment had no effect on the binding of LAK cells to target cells. PMA pretreatment of LAK cells caused total disappearance of protein kinase C (PKC) activity from LAK cells concomitant with the loss of LAK activity. However, PMA-pretreated LAK cells cultured for another 24 h in the absence of PMA revealed levels of PKC activity and cytotoxicity identical with untreated LAK cells. These results strongly suggest that PMA-induced down-regulation of LAK cell-mediated cytotoxicity is due to the inactivation of PKC-dependent transduction systems that are essential post LAK cell-target cell binding.  相似文献   

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