首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We have investigated the in vitro effects of the neurohormone beta-endorphin (b-end) on natural killer (NK) activity and interferon (IFN) production mediated by large granular lymphocytes (LGL). LGL-enriched fractions from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from normal human volunteers were obtained by fractionation over discontinuous Percoll gradients. LGL were preincubated with or without various concentrations of b-end or the closely related peptides alpha-endorphin (a-end), gamma-endorphin (g-end), or D-ALA2-beta-endorphin (D-ALA2-b-end), a synthetic b-end analogue. NK activity was assayed on 51Cr-labeled K562 target cells. Preincubation of LGL effectors (but not K562 targets) for 2 to 18 hr with concentrations of b-end between 10(-7) M and 10(-10) M produced significant augmentation of NK cytolytic activity (mean percentage increase: 63%). The classic opiate antagonist naloxone blocked the enhancing effect when used at a 100-fold molar excess relative to b-end. Neither a-end nor g-end could augment NK activity, whereas D-ALA2-b-end produced an enhancement comparable with that produced by b-end. In addition, incubation of LGL with b-end in the presence of phytohemagglutinin or poly I:C significantly augmented IFN production. These findings demonstrate that b-end enhances NK activity and IFN production of purified LGL, and suggests that b-end might bind to an opioid receptor on LGL that can be blocked by naloxone. These results lend support to the concepts of regulation of the immune response by neurohormones and the functional relationship between the nervous and immune systems.  相似文献   

2.
Human recombinant interleukin 2 (hrIL-2) was demonstrated in vitro to be chemotactic for mouse large granular lymphocytes (LGL) activated in vivo by virus infection. Peritoneal exudate cells harvested from virus-infected mice were used as a source of LGL. LGL collected from mouse hepatitis virus-infected mice at 3 days postinfection were a source for NK 1.1 positive natural killer (NK)/LGL. LGL collected from mice treated with antiserum to gangliotetraosylceramide and infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus for 7 days were used as a source for Lyt-2 positive cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL)/LGL. Both NK/LGL and CTL/LGL responded chemotactically to hrIL-2, purified IFN-beta, and to crude cell-free washout fluids collected from the peritoneal cavity of virus-infected mice. hrIL-2 had chemotactic activity for virus-elicited granular and agranular lymphocytes but did not attract the contaminating macrophages, in contrast to IFN-beta, which displayed chemotactic activity for virus-elicited granular and agranular lymphocytes as well as macrophages. The migration to hrIL-2 was inhibited by a monoclonal antibody (7D4) to the IL-2 receptor, but treatment with 7D4 did not affect migration in response to IFN-beta. Microscopic examination of Wright's-Giemsa-stained migrated NK/LGL and CTL/LGL revealed that the majority of migrated LGL in either LGL population had a blast cell morphology (enlarged cells with rich basophilic cytoplasm). The frequency of cells bearing the LGL morphology within the virus-elicited nonadherent peritoneal exudate cell population was on incubation in vitro, stabilized by either hrIL-2 or IFN-beta. These data suggest that another important immunomodulating function of IL-2 may be to attract activated NK/LGL and CTL/LGL to sites of inflammation.  相似文献   

3.
Normal as well as transformed epidermal cells (EC) have recently been reported to produce a cytokine--EC-derived thymocyte-activating factor (ETAF), which according to its biologic as well as biochemical properties is indistinguishable from macrophage-derived interleukin 1 (IL 1). In the present study, the effect of supernatants (SN) derived from normal EC and a human squamous carcinoma cell (SCC) line were tested for their effects on natural killer (NK) cell activity. EC- as well as SCC-derived SN were able to augment in vitro NK cell activity of peripheral blood lymphocytes against K 562 cells. In contrast, adherent cell-derived, IL 1-containing SN did not affect NK cell activity. Upon high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) gel filtration, ETAF and the EC-derived NK cell activity-augmenting factor (ENKAF) exhibited a similar m.w. However, by using reverse-phase HPLC, ETAF and ENKAF eluted as distinct peaks of activity, indicating that SCC cell-derived ENKAF is different from ETAF. Furthermore, ENKAF does not contain interleukin 2 (IL 2) or interferon (IFN) activity. The enhancement of NK cell activity was dose dependent and evident after 20 hr of preincubation of effector cells. Pretreatment of target cells with ENKAF did not affect the susceptibility of the target cells. The NK activity of large granular lymphocytes (LGL) purified by discontinuous Percoll gradient centrifugation and further depleted of high-affinity sheep erythrocyte rosetting cells was enhanced by ENKAF. In contrast, no NK cell activity was expressed by LGL-depleted T cell populations before or after treatment with ENKAF. In a single cell cytotoxicity assay in agarose, the number of lymphocyte binding to K 562 was not affected by ENKAF, but the frequency of dead conjugated target cells and presumably of active killer cells was increased by pretreatment with ENKAF. Additional incubation of LGL with ETAF did not further increase ENKAF-mediated augmentation of NK activity. In contrast to ETAF, ENKAF was not chemotactic for polymorphonuclear leukocytes. These results indicate that normal as well as transformed EC release a unique cytokine--ENKAF--which augments NK cell activity of LGL but is distinct from ETAF, IL 2, and IFN.  相似文献   

4.
Highly enriched populations of human large granular lymphocytes (LGL), natural killer (NK) cells, and T cells were obtained from low and high density fractions, respectively, of discontinuous Percoll gradients. The NK cells were composed of 75 to 90% LGL, with the majority of the contaminating cells being monocytes. The T cells were greater than 95% OKT3+. The proliferative and cytotoxic progenitors in both fractions were examined by using a limiting dilution assay with interleukin 2 (IL 2) from four sources: 1) crude supernatant of a gibbon lymphoma (MLA-144), 2) purified (150,000-fold) MLA-144 IL 2, 3) partially purified human IL 2, and 4) purified recombinant human IL 2. The proliferative capacity was measured at day 7 by [3H]thymidine incorporation, whereas the progenitors of cells with NK-like activity were evaluated by assessing cytotoxic activity against K562 cells at day 8 in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay. The frequency of proliferative progenitors among T cells was approximately 1/5 and was approximately 1/60 with LGL. Titration of the highly purified IL 2 preparation demonstrated that LGL proliferated with as little as 2 U of IL 2. The frequency of detectable cytotoxic progenitors in the LGL population, however, fell sharply when less than 40 U of IL 2 were employed. The T cells failed to demonstrate cytotoxic activity against the NK-susceptible target cells at any concentration of IL 2 tested. The IL 2 preparations also were examined for their ability to directly and rapidly enhance the cytotoxic activity of highly purified NK cells. All four preparations of IL 2 enhanced the cytotoxic activity of LGL without any detectable accessory requirement after incubation for as little as 6 hr, even though the MLA-144 IL 2 preparations were devoid of detectable interferons (IFN). These data indicate that IL 2 has dual effects on NK cells, regulating their activity was well as promoting their proliferation. Collectively, these results demonstrate that highly purified IL 2, devoid of other detectable lymphokines, is capable of supporting the growth of human NK cells and augmenting their in vitro activity. In parallel experiments, these same IL 2 preparations were quite active in causing the proliferation of T lymphocytes, clearly demonstrating a role of IL 2 in promoting the proliferation of NK cells as well as T cells. The mechanism of IL 2 boosting appears to be a direct interaction with LGL, resulting in the production of IFN gamma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Several reports indicate that human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) seeded in culture with purified or recombinant interleukin 2 (IL 2) immediately after separation from the blood display a substantial level of proliferation at day 5 or 6, even in the absence of any activating signal. The spontaneously IL 2 proliferating cells are large lymphocytes, and they co-purify on a Percoll gradient in the large granular lymphocytes (third (LGL) fraction) together with the natural killer (NK) activity. When LGL were separated into NKH1 (an NK-specific surface marker)-positive and NKH1-negative cells by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), proliferating cells were mainly found in the NKH1-negative fraction. On the contrary, when cells from Percoll fraction 3 were separated into OKT3-negative and positive cells, the majority of the proliferating cell was found in the OKT3-positive cells. These results indicate that spontaneously IL 2 proliferating (SIP) cells most probably belong to the T cell lineage, but are distinct from NK cells. Surprisingly, cells from this Percoll fraction examined immediately after separation from the blood do not express detectable amounts of IL 2 receptors as assessed by three different techniques: binding of [3H]IL 2, binding of [125I]anti-Tac antibodies, and FACS analysis with the use of anti-Tac antibodies. However, after 18 hr of culture in IL 2-supplemented medium, 5 to 7% of these cells became Tac-positive by FACS analysis. Additional analysis of IL 2 receptor induced in culture with IL 2 was performed by [125I]anti-TAC binding and by [3H]IL 2 binding. Scatchard analysis of [3H]IL 2 binding, in the range of concentrations leading to the detection of high-affinity binding sites, showed an affinity constant similar to that of conventional phytohemagglutinin blasts. The role of IL 2/IL 2 receptor interaction in the proliferation process was confirmed by the fact that proliferation, in contrast with NK activation, was clearly inhibited by anti-Tac antibodies. When LGL activated with IL 2 for 60 hr were sorted into Tac+ and Tac- cells, equal levels of NK activity was found in the two fractions. Proliferation, however, was only observed in the Tac+ population. We interpret these results to indicate that SIP cells are preactivated cells circulating in the blood. They are large cells and represent a very small proportion of circulating lymphocytes (0.3%). They express a subliminal amount of IL 2 receptor. Cultivated in the presence of IL 2, IL 2 receptor expression is enhanced to a detectable level, and the SIP cells begin to proliferate. These SIP cells could be activated T cells present in every normal individual.  相似文献   

6.
NK activity of mice as well as humans and rats has been clearly associated with large granular lymphocytes (LGL). To better understand the effects of interferon (IFN) and IFN inducers on natural killer (NK) cells, we have compared the LGL in the spleens of normal and boosted mice. Cells were fractionated by centrifugation on discontinuous Percoll density gradients, and each fraction was tested for NK activity against YAC-1 targets and for the presence of LGL. In vivo treatment with C. parvum (0.7 mg/mouse, i.p., day-3), MVE-2 (25 mg/kg, i.p., day-3), poly I:C (4 mg/kg, i.p., day-3), or IFN (10(5) U/mouse, i.p., day-1) resulted in a marked augmentation and a change of distribution of cytotoxic activity. Most of the NK activity of boosted spleen cells was associated with lower density fractions 1 and 2, whereas active normal spleen cells had somewhat higher density (fractions 2 and 3). In parallel to their increased reactivity, the boosted spleens had a marked increase in the percentage of LGL, particularly in fractions 1 and 2. The augmented activity appeared to be mediated by the LGL, because treatment with anti-asialo GM1 or anti-Thy-1.2 plus complement reduced NK as well as the number of LGL. These results indicate that IFN-mediated boosting of NK activity in the spleen is due to an increase in the lower density LGL, as well as to an increase in the function of preexisting NK cells.  相似文献   

7.
In vitro natural killer (NK) activity expressed by blood mononuclear cells from patients with chronic granulomatous disease of childhood (CGD) was equivalent to that expressed by cells from normal, healthy volunteers. Because neutrophils and monocytes from these same donors exhibited extremely depressed oxidative functions, our data could be interpreted to show that a) NK cells derived from a unique and separate cellular lineage unaffected by the disease-related oxidative defect, or b) the in vitro cytolytic mechanism(s) of NK cells were not dependent on oxygen metabolites. These hypotheses were examined by using as NK effector cells large granular lymphocytes (LGL) from healthy donors whose monocytes and neutrophils had normal oxidative functions. Such functions were measured in the nitroblue tetrazolium dye reduction assay, which is a qualitative measurement of superoxide anion production; by reduction of ferric cytochrome c, a more specific and quantitative measurement of superoxide anion production; and in the luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence assay, an extremely sensitive measure of several reactive oxygen radicals, including superoxide anion, hydroxyl radical, and singlet oxygen. Whereas monocytes and neutrophils from healthy donors were readily stimulated with zymosan or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) in each of these assays. LGL produced no detectable amounts of oxygen metabolites when co-incubated either with K562 erythroleukemia cells, PMA, E. coli endotoxin, or the calcium ionophore A23187. Thus, because NK cell activity is normal in CGD patients with major oxidative defects, and because no reactive oxygen metabolites could be detected in LGL that simultaneously exhibited potent NK activity, we conclude that in vitro NK activity by human mononuclear cells involves a lytic mechanism(s) independent of oxygen metabolites.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The human T lymphoblastoid cell line CEM was subjected to immunoselection by co-culture with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) for resistance to natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis. The NK susceptibility of the resulting subline, CEM.NKR, was 8.4 to 20.6% of that of CEM when PBMC or adherent cell-depleted PBMC were used as effector cells, and -7.1 to 12.1% of that of CEM when Percoll gradient-enriched large granular lymphocytes (LGL) were used. However, CEM and CEM.NKR exhibited comparable sensitivity to antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. Unlabeled CEM was eight- to 32-fold more effective than unlabeled CEM.NKR in inhibiting the NK lysis of labeled CEM target cells, and CEM bound 1.9 to 3.9-fold more Percoll gradient-enriched LGL than CEM.NKR in single cell-binding assays, suggesting that the NK-resistant variant has lost the expression of NK target antigens. However, CEM.NKR was comparable to CEM in its ability to induce interferon (IFN)-alpha production by PBMC in vitro, and the NK-resistant variant maintained its susceptibility to the antiproliferative effects of IFN-alpha, indicating that these phenomena may be mediated by molecules other than NK target structures. Comparison of CEM and CEM.NKR by indirect immunofluorescence with monoclonal antibodies specific for leukocyte antigens and the transferrin receptor, and by microcytotoxicity typing for HLA-A and B specificities, revealed no major differences.  相似文献   

10.
Interferon (IFN) and IFN inducers are known to boost natural killer (NK) activity in vivo and in vitro. In vivo enhancement of NK activity results from activation of preexisting NK cells as well as from an increased number of large granular lymphocytes (LGL), with a portion of them undergoing cell division. Our study was addressed to analyze the sequence of metabolic events occurring within the LGL population of Fischer rats treated with poly(I:C), as an IFN inducer. The increase in cytotoxic activity and LGL number in the peripheral blood already reached maximal levels by 12 hr after poly(I:C) injection, remained on a plateau 24 to 48 hr later, then slightly decreased on Day 4, and returned to control levels by Day 6. A similar kinetics was observed for RNA synthesis. In contrast DNA synthesis first increased at 24 hr, peaked at 48 hr, then decreased on Day 4, and was not detectable on Day 6. Percoll fractionation resulted in 92-97% of LGL in fraction 1, and cells in this fraction accounted for the increase of cytotoxicity as well as for newly synthesized RNA and DNA. However, LGL recovered on Day 1 or 2 after poly(I:C) stimulation displayed quite heterogeneous morphology, and a number of mitotic configurations were seen on Day 2 within the LGL population. Our results indicate that the boosting of NK activity by poly(I:C) is always associated with an increase in LGL numbers, the enhanced lytic capacity is associated in vivo with new RNA synthesis by the NK cells, and only in a later phase NK cell proliferation may account for the increase in LGL numbers.  相似文献   

11.
Type beta transforming growth factor (TGF-beta) is a unique polypeptide that has been isolated from a number of different tissues and can induce the phenotypic transformation of non-neoplastic fibroblasts as measured by the stimulation of their growth in soft agar. Recently, TGF-beta has been demonstrated to exert profound inhibitory effects on T and B lymphocyte proliferation. In this study, the effects of TGF-beta on natural killer (NK) cell function were investigated. After 20 hr of culture in the presence of TGF-beta, the NK activity of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) was significantly reduced compared with PBL cultured in medium alone. Similarly, TGF-beta produced a significant depression in the cytolytic activity of highly enriched large granular lymphocytes (LGL). This effect of TGF-beta appeared to be mediated directly on the effector cells, because cultivation of the K562 target cells in TGF-beta did not affect target cell susceptibility to lysis. Binding studies with 125I-TGF-beta indicated that LGL possess approximately 1400 high-affinity (Kd = 1PM) receptors/cell, which represents a considerably higher affinity receptor for TGF-beta than that found on fibroblasts. Culturing of PBL and LGL in TGF-beta resulted in a marked blunting of the boosting of NK cytolysis by interferon-alpha but not by interleukin 2, which suggested that TGF-beta may down-regulate interferon-alpha receptors on NK cells. These results, indicate that in addition to inhibitory effects on T and B cells, TGF-beta also inhibits NK cell function. Although the in vivo role of TGF-beta is presently undefined, it may be an important immunoregulatory protein that has a negative influence on lymphocyte activation.  相似文献   

12.
The biochemical mechanisms involved in the activation and killing of tumor targets by large granular lymphocytes (LGL) have not yet been clearly defined. This laboratory has investigated these processes by analyzing the effects of protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors (1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)2-methyl-piperazine-dihydrochloride and retinol) on LGL cytotoxicity and IFN-gamma production. We now report that PKC inhibitors block the LGL functions of 1) NK activity, 2) IFN-gamma production, and 3) LAK activity induced by IL-2. Complete inhibition of cytotoxic activity occurs rapidly because only 2.5 h treatment of the LGL with the inhibitors was required. However, the inhibition of NK activity by the PKC inhibitors could be reversed by IL-2 or the synthetic diacylglycerol, L-gamma-1-oleyl-2-acetol-sn-3-glycerol (OAG), but not by IFN-alpha. The reversal of inhibition observed with OAG indicates that, in these studies, (1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)2-methyl-piperazine-dihydrochloride is inhibiting PKC activity and not the activity of other cellular kinases. Furthermore, inhibition of LGL functional activity with PGE2 could not be reversed with OAG, supporting the contention that PG inhibition of NK activity is mediated by a pathway that does not directly involve PKC. These results indicate, in addition to IL-2-mediated events, that basal NK activity is under PKC regulatory control.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of IL-6 and IL-2 on highly purified, human peripheral blood large granular lymphocytes (LGL) were investigated and compared. IL-6 enhanced LGL NK activity in a dose-dependent manner against K562, however IL-2 was a more potent stimulus of LGL NK function. Neither IL-2 nor IL-6 increased LGL cytotoxic potential in a parallel estimation of heteroconjugated antibody (anti-CD16 x anti-nitrophenyl mAb)-dependent cytotoxicity against nitrophenyl-modified YAC. Unlike IL-2, IL-6 did not significantly induce LGL lymphokine-activated killer activity, LGL proliferation, or LGL lymphokine production. In particular, IL-6 did not stimulate detectable LGL IL-2 production or IL-2R modulation, and mAb to the p75 IL-2R had no effect on IL-6 induction of LGL NK activity. Therefore, in the absence of T cells, IL-6 provided an IL-2-independent signal to LGL that resulted in augmentation of their NK activity without stimulating their proliferation or other LGL functions.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Generation of NK cell activity from human bone marrow   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
This study was designed to examine the effect of interleukin 2 (IL 2) on cytotoxic activity of human bone marrow cells and to characterize the IL 2-dependent killer cells and the cell population required for their induction. We have demonstrated that the most aggressive IL 2-dependent killer cells (directed against leukemic and solid cancer targets) exhibited LGL morphology and expressed NK cell-associated antigens NKH1 and CD16, but not T cell-associated antigens CD3, CD4, CD5, or CD8. Similarly, the bone marrow cell population necessary for induction of killer cells with highest cytotoxic activity displayed NK cell surface characteristics, as exemplified by CD16 and Leu-7 antigens. On the contrary, very low or no lytic activity was generated from the bone marrow cell population expressing T cell markers CD3 and CD5. These data indicate that the IL 2-dependent bone marrow-derived killer cells with antitumor activity were activated NK cells. If T cells are involved at all in IL 2-dependent bone marrow killing, their potency is inferior to that of activated NK cells. The clinical applications of these studies are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The developmental relationships among large agranular lymphocytes (LAL) large granular lymphocytes (LGL) and the activation of these cells into lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells by rIL-2 was investigated. Highly enriched populations of LAL were isolated from Fischer 344 spleen cells by a combination of nylon-wool filtration (to remove B cells and macrophages), treatment with a pan T cell antibody plus complement (to remove T cells) and incubation in L-leucine methyl ester (to remove LGL). The resultant cells were highly enriched in morphologically identifiable LAL which expressed asialo GM1 and partially expressed the OX8 surface marker. The enriched LAL did not contain detectable NK cytotoxic activity, did not express pan T cell (OX19), Ia, Ig, or laminin surface markers and contained less than 0.2% LGL. Incubation of LAL in a low dose of rIL-2 (100 U/ml) induced the generation of LGL having NK activity within 24 h of culture. Longer culture periods (48 h) resulted in a continued increase in the percentage of LGL and higher levels of NK activity. However, with this low dose of rIL-2, little or no LAK activity (i.e., reactivity against NK-resistant target cells) was generated. With a high dose of rIL-2 (500 U/ml), LAL responded by first generating LGL with NK activity (within 24 h), with subsequent generation of LAK activity by 48 h. Evidence that the development of granular lymphocytes from LAL was responsible first for NK activity and then LAK activity was demonstrated by depletion of the generated granular NK or LAK effector cells by second treatments with L-leucine methyl ester. Concomitant with the induction of LGL with NK or LAK activity, rIL-2 also caused LGL to proliferate and expand four- to five-fold in 48 h. This occurred in the presence of high or low dose rIL-2. These results indicate that LAL are the precursors of LGL/NK cells, that LAL, LGL/NK cells and LAK cells appear to represent sequential developmental or activation stages and that LAL may comprise major source of LAK progenitors in lymphoid populations having few LGL or mature active NK cells.  相似文献   

17.
Highly purified populations of large granular lymphocytes (LGL) have been shown to mediate natural killer (NK) cell activity. The mechanism of target cell killing by NK cells is as yet undefined; however, it has been postulated that such killing may involve soluble cytotoxic factors produced and secreted by NK cells. The data presented show that NK-sensitive, but not NK-resistant, tumor cell lines induce highly purified populations of human LGL to produce factors with cytotoxic and/or cytostatic activities. We have identified one of these factors as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and have shown that production of this factor is enhanced by recombinant human interferon-gamma (rHuIFN-gamma). We have also examined the role of TNF-alpha in the cytotoxic function of NK cells. The data show that although highly purified LGL populations produce low levels of TNF-alpha, the cytotoxic/cytostatic activity of this lymphokine on tumor target cells does not correlate with the cytotoxic activity of highly purified populations of LGL on tumor target cells. Furthermore, NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity is not reliably inhibited by antibodies directed against various epitopes of recombinant human TNF-alpha and/or recombinant TNF-beta (lymphotoxin) or rHuIFN-gamma. These data show that although TNF-alpha is produced by highly purified NK-containing LGL cell populations, this factor does not appear to be responsible for NK cell cytotoxicity against classical NK target cells such as Molt-4 or K562. We suggest that NK function can be attributed to a combination of factors rather than to a single factor alone, and that at least two major phenomena are involved in LGL function: the rapid cytotoxic events which lead to the cell lysis measured in classical in vitro NK assays such as against K562; and the release of factors such as TNF-alpha with cytotoxic/cytostatic activities which would inhibit the growth of invading tumor cells in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
The present study reports the characterization of a non-T cell from human peripheral blood which is capable of releasing BCGF. This BCGF-producing non-T cell had a T3-, T8-, Leu-7+, OKM1+, HLA-DR-, Leu-11- surface phenotype and was likely to belong to the so-called large granular lymphocyte (LGL) subset because: after fractionation of non-T cells according to the expression of Leu-7 or HLA-DR markers, it was found in the Leu-7+, HLA-DR- fractions that were particularly enriched in LGL; it co-purified with LGL on Percoll density gradients; and it expressed Leu-7 and OKM1 markers that are shared by a large fraction of LGL. Although co-purified with cells with potent NK capacities, the BCGF-producing cell was not cytotoxic, because treatment of Leu-7+ cells with Leu-11 monoclonal antibody and complement abolished the NK activity but left the BCGF activity unaltered. The factor released by this LGL subset was not IL 1 or IL 2 mistakenly interpreted as BCGF, because: a) cell supernatants particularly rich in BCGF activity contained very little or no IL 1 or IL 2; b) BCGF-induced B cell proliferation was not inhibitable by anti-Tac antibodies (this in spite of the expression of IL 2 receptor by a proportion of activated B cells); and c) BCGF activity was absorbed by B but not T blasts.  相似文献   

19.
Highly purified human large granular (LGL), depleted of any detectable contaminant T and B cells or monocytes, were found to be potent producers in vitro of a soluble B cell growth factor (BCGF) able to sustain proliferation of B cells activated by anti-mu. Activation by lectins (phytohemagglutinin, PHA, concanavalin A, Con A; and pokeweed mitogen, PWM) was required to induce the production of high levels of this BCGF from cultured LGL. Production of BCGF was also detected after the binding of LGL with natural killer (NK)-sensitive (K562) but not with NK-resistant (RL male 1) target cells. In contrast to T cells, LGL did not need the additional presence of accessory cells to reach optimal production of BCGF by 72 hr of culture. The subpopulation of LGL responsible for the production of BCGF had phenotypic characteristics associated with NK cells (3G8+, HNK1+/OKT11+, DR-, OKT3-, Leu-M1-), and separated cells with these markers exerted high levels of NK activity. Selective production of BCGF also was obtained from cytotoxic clones derived from LGL. A partial characterization of the LGL-derived BCGF was performed by gel filtration. BCGF activity was detected in fractions with estimated m.w. of 20,000 and 45,000. The LGL-derived BCGF activity was resistant to reduction with 2-mercaptoethanol and was stable at -20 degrees C for months. Conversely, heating (56 degrees C for 1 hr) or digestion with trypsin greatly reduced the LGL-derived BCGF activity. These findings strongly suggest that LGL including those with NK activity can play an important positive role in the early events of the B cell-mediated immune response.  相似文献   

20.
Regulatory effect of CD25, an activation antigen the alpha subunit of interleukin 2 receptor (IL2R) on the activity of natural killer (NK) cells was studied in fifty elderly (57-70 years old) and fifty young people (19-35 years old). Cytotoxic NK activity was assessed by 51Cr release assay, the levels of interleukin 2 (IL2) and tumour necrosis factors alpha (TNFalpha) were measured using bioassays and expression of CD16 and CD25 proteins by flow cytometry. Low NK activity in the elderly was associated with decline of full health, lowered serum concentration of IL2 and increased production of TNFalpha during NK reaction. Inhibition of TNFalpha activity by anti-TNF monoclonal antibody suppressed exclusively NK activity of low NK responders. Moreover, stimulation in vitro of blood mononuclear cells, with TNFalpha induced in the elderly low NK responders a significantly higher increase of the CD25 expression on the surface of NK cells as compared with that in the elderly high responders. Since the CD25 molecule constitutes a subunit of the high affinity receptor, binding IL2 to immunocompetent cells, its increased expression on NK cells of low NK responders would enable them to bind even low amounts of the endogenous IL2 available in this group of the elderly. Thus, an overproduction of TNFalpha seems to be a mechanism compensating, in the non-fully healthy elderly, for the decreased IL2 production, promoting efficient cytotoxic reaction.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号