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1.
The susceptibility of human neuroblastoma cells to direct cellular cytotoxicity has not been previously established. This is of particular interest because of their aggressive growth and low HLA expression. Neuroblastoma lines CHP 100 and CHP 126 were found to be excellent targets in 4-hr CML assays. Natural killer (NK) cells from fresh PBL and from an NK clone, 3.3, have high lytic activity against both cell lines. We also studied mixed lymphocyte culture-generated cytotoxic lines containing allo-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) directed against HLA antigens present on the neuroblastoma target cell lines. These lines did show excellent lytic activity, but cold target competition studies indicated that all of the lysis resulted from NK activity. This was verified by using inhibition studies with the use of monoclonal antibodies. OKT 3 and anti-HLA antibodies that block CTL function caused no reduction in kill. In contrast, anti-lymphocyte function antigen-1 (anti-LFA-1), which blocks both NK and CTL function, significantly inhibited lysis. These results serve as a functional confirmation of earlier findings of a very weak expression of HLA-A,B,C and beta 2-microglobulin on neuroblastoma cells.  相似文献   

2.
The susceptibility of murine trophoblast cells to natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity has been assessed. Primary short-term cultures of murine trophoblast cells isolated from 14-day placentas were found to be resistant to endogenous and interferon-activated natural killer (NK) cells and natural cytotoxic cells. That the relevant target structures are expressed on the surface of trophoblast cells and accessible to the effectors was demonstrated by their ability to inhibit the lysis of NK-sensitive target cells (YAC-1) in a dose-dependent manner. The lytic resistance of trophoblast cells was unaffected by neuraminidase treatment, inhibition of protein synthesis, or extending the assay time to 12 hr. Moreover, trophoblast cells were resistant to antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity when coated with an alloantibody capable of mediating their lysis in the presence of heterologous complement. Neither the preincubation of effector cells in concentrated trophoblast culture supernatants nor the direct exposure of effectors to monolayers of trophoblast cells inhibited their NK lytic activity, indicating that the secretion of a suppressive factor or the direct inactivation of the NK cells was not responsible for the observed resistance to lysis. These observations, together with previous results showing the resistance of trophoblast to cytotoxic T cell-mediated lysis, reveal that murine trophoblast cells possess a resistance mechanism against several forms of cell-mediated lysis. This feature of trophoblast cells at the maternal-fetal interface is likely to play an important role in protecting the fetoplacental allograft from immune rejection.  相似文献   

3.
Three long-term clonally derived cytotoxic lines have been established from isolates of murine intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL). All three lines were selected for with antigen and represent two allospecific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones and a major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted clone specific for a murine minor histocompatibility antigen. On long-term in vitro culture, IEL clones gradually lost antigen-specific lytic activity and simultaneously acquired the capacity to lyse natural killer (NK)-sensitive target cells which, in some cases, required high-level lymphokine activation. Of interest was the finding that, despite changes in lytic specificity, IEL clones remained strictly antigen-dependent for proliferation. A murine CTL clone of splenic origin, which was propagated under culture conditions identical to those used for IEL, did not exhibit changes in lytic specificity, suggesting that acquired changes in IEL function cannot be attributed solely to the influence of in vitro culture. Phenotypic analyses of IEL clones with altered lytic specificity revealed that all lines remained Thy-1+, Lyt-2+, L3T4-, with or without lytic activation by lymphokines. The expression of CT-1, a murine CTL activation antigen, and asialo GM1, a murine NK cell marker, were variable on IEL clones, and their presence did not correlate with the changes in lytic behavior. Collectively, these findings provide evidence, at the clonal level, that at least some NK activity present in isolates of murine IEL may originate from antigen-specific CTL. The data also indicate that, on binding antigen, different signals are conveyed to T cells, resulting in proliferation or target cell lysis.  相似文献   

4.
The sensitivity of target cells to natural killer (NK) cell-mediated cytotoxicity was investigated. Five target cell lines were examined for susceptibility to killing by activated NK cells in a 4-hour cytotoxicity assay: one of them (K562) was highly sensitive, while the other four were resistant. However, the four NK-resistant target cell lines were fully susceptible to lysis when the assay was extended to 24 h. The cytotoxic cells that killed the NK-resistant target cells in a 24-hour assay were plastic- and nylon wool-nonadherent human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and their cytotoxicity was increased by interferon-alpha, interferon-gamma, and interleukin-2. Further, the cytotoxic activity of PBMC in the long-term assay was associated with large granular lymphocytes purified on a Percoll gradient, that killed the NK-sensitive cell line K562 in a 4-hour assay. All of the above are general criteria to qualify the cytotoxic cells as NK cells. Thus, the NK-resistant phenotype may not reflect absolute immunity to NK-mediated lysis, but it may reflect the different rates at which various target cell lines can be killed.  相似文献   

5.
Single cell cytotoxicity assays reveal that a large percentage of lymphocytes are unable to kill attached targets in a 4- to 18-hr assay. Additional signals (in the form of lectin or anti-target antibody) delivered to target-bound lymphocytes enable these previously non-lytic lymphocytes to kill attached target cells. This finding was obtained by using a modification of the single cell assay, in which lectin or target cell antibody is incorporated into agarose with preformed lymphocyte-target conjugates. Human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) or Percoll density gradient-enriched large granular lymphocytes (LGL) were used as effector cells in natural killer (NK), antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (LDCC) assay systems. The targets used were NK-sensitive K562 and Molt-4 and NK-insensitive Raji. Several findings were made in the modified single cell assay, namely a) the frequency of cytotoxic NK or ADCC effector cells was not augmented, suggesting that the initial trigger was sufficient for lytic expression in these instances. Furthermore, these results showed that the NK-sensitive targets used do not bind nonspecifically to the LDCC effector cells. K562 coated with Con A, however, serve as LDCC targets. b) The frequency of two target conjugate lysis by NK/K effectors was not augmented by Con A. These results suggest that Con A does not potentiate the killing of multiple targets bound to a single cytotoxic lymphocyte. c) Although conjugates formed between LGL or PBL and NK-insensitive Raji are non-lethal, significant lysis was observed when these conjugates were suspended in Con A or antibody agarose. These results demonstrate that Raji bind to cytotoxic NK, K, and LDCC effector cells, but are lysed only when the appropriate trigger is provided. d) The cytotoxic potential of non-lytic conjugates appears to lie within the low density Percoll fraction, although the high density lymphocytes are able to nonlethally bind to targets. Altogether the results demonstrate that target recognition and/or binding by the effector cells is a distinct event from the trigger or lytic process. The implications of these findings are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
CTL-mediated lysis is unique among lytic mechanisms in inducing rapid, prelytic nuclear disintegration. Target cell DNA can be solubilized within minutes as a result of degradation, which can proceed to the nucleosomal level, presumably mediated by endonucleases that are either endogenous or injected by the CTL. Nuclear disintegration has been reported for mouse lymphoid target cells by several groups. However, previous studies in which human target cells were studied saw little or no DNA solubilization. We here report rapid, extensive CTL-induced solubilization of DNA in human lymphoid target cells; on the other hand, we found that three mouse cell lines exhibit little or no nuclear disintegration. We conclude that the degree of nuclear disintegration depends on the nature of the target cell, but is not determined by the species of origin of the target cell.  相似文献   

7.
This study was designed to further understand the nature of the interaction between natural killer (NK) cells and their susceptible targets. To do this, a panel of sugars and two lectins was tested for the ability to inhibit the lysis of NK-sensitive targets by cloned and uncloned lines of human NK cells. Six of these sugars (beta-gentiobiose, sucrose, alpha-lactose, beta-lactose, N-acetylglucosamine, and N-acetylgalactosamine) and one lectin, wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), proved to be potent inhibitors of the lytic activity of NK cells as well as of cytotoxic T lymphocytes activated in mixed lymphocyte cultures. Both beta-gentiobiose and WGA were shown to inhibit lysis at the level of the killer cell. Finally, the inhibitory effect of WGA could be reversed by addition of its sugar ligand, N-acetylglucosamine, which is itself an inhibitor of lytic function. From these findings it is concluded that these inhibitors probably do not act at the recognition stage of lysis since all of the NK and CTL lines tested, regardless of specificity, were inhibited by the same panel of sugars and lectins. Instead, it appears more likely that these inhibitors block some postrecognition stage of the lytic mechanism. The common inhibition profile by these sugars on NK and CTL activity further suggests that these two cell types may share, at least partially, a common lytic mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
The studies described in this publication were designed to determine which stage of the NK lytic mechanism is inhibited by anti-C-reactive protein (CRP). Although anti-CRP prevents target cell lysis, it does not block E:T cell conjugate formation. In parallel experiments, the number of conjugates observed in the presence of anti-CRP was normal, whereas the number of target cells killed by this same group of effector cells was greatly inhibited. Since an early stage of NK-mediated lysis requires calcium, conjugates can be synchronized by incubating effector and target cells in the absence of calcium. When conjugates were formed in the absence of calcium, and anti-CRP and calcium were then added to cultures at the same time, anti-CRP inhibited maximally. Anti-CRP continued to inhibit somewhat throughout the calcium-dependent stage but did not block lysis when added after the completion of calcium requiring events. Events that are blocked by anti-CRP must be required for the generation of NK cytotoxic factor because anti-CRP blocks the production of this factor. Once generated, however, anti-CRP does not block the activity of NK cytotoxic factor. This evidence indicates that anti-CRP blocks NK-mediated lysis at the calcium dependent stage of lysis. Events that follow this stage in the lytic process are also inhibited.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The effect of Adriamycin (ADM) on eryhtroleukaemia K 562 cell susceptibility to human natural killer (NK) cell activity has been studied. When cultivated for 3 days in the presence of 10 to 40 nM ADM, K 562 cells decreased their susceptibility to NK-mediated lysis in a dose-dependent fashion. At a concentration of 40 nM, previously found to induce optimal differentiation-associated properties in K 562 cells, the induced resistance to NK-mediated lysis increased progressively from day 1 to day 3 of culture. ADM treatment did not induce K 562 cells to release factors which interfered with NK activity since supernatants from ADM-treated K 562 cell cultures caused no significant modification in the NK lytic process. Binding to NK of ADM-treated K 562 cells was unaffected since treated and untreated cells had identical capacities in a conjugate-forming cell assay or adsorption of NK cells on target cell monolayers. In cold target competition assays ADM-treated K 562 cells acted as more effective competitors than untreated K 562 cells. These observations imply that the reduced killing of the ADM-treated K 562 cells was independent of target-NK cell recognition, and suggest that ADM treatment could allow malignant cells to escape NK surveillance.  相似文献   

10.
The "lazy" NK cells of Chediak-Higashi syndrome   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Natural killer (NK) function, measured in a short-term (4-hr) 51Cr-release assay, is profoundly depressed in circulating PBL of donors with Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS). In this study, we demonstrate that CHS NK cells can express relatively normal lytic function after prolonged exposure in vitro to high levels of activating as well as cytotoxic stimuli. After activation with the human cloned interferon (B1) for 24 hr, CHS NK cells have lytic activity comparable to unactivated normals in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay. In addition, after 5 days of activation with mitomycin C-treated B cell lines, CHS NK cells have levels of activity similar to those of activated normals but are defective in generating cytotoxic cells capable of lysing the stimulator B cell. Even though CHS NK cells are defective in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay, after 16 hr they enhance their killing capability 200 to 400-fold. In fact, after 16 hr of interaction with K562 target cells, CHS NK cells are capable of releasing NK soluble cytotoxic factors. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that CHS NK cells have all the necessary cellular structures and molecules required for them to function as lytic effector cells, but their lack of cytotoxic function is due to a relative refractoriness in initiating the post-binding lytic mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Recent evidence has demonstrated that the lytic function of natural killer cells might be regulated by potential target cells through the target cells' expression of cell surface components that are able to inhibit the lytic process. Specifically, it has been shown in many target cell systems that the expression of class I MHC proteins by target cells is inversely proportional to their susceptibility to lysis by NK cells. It has been suggested, therefore, that MHC proteins may act as important negative regulatory elements in the ongoing control of NK cell function. Herein, we examined two closely related murine lymphoma cells (ASL1 and ASL1w), both in terms of their susceptibility to lysis by NK cells as well as their expression of both H-2K and H-2D class I MHC proteins. The results of these studies showed that whereas ASL1 and ASL1w cells differed greatly in their susceptibility to NK cell lysis (ASL1 was much more NK resistant than ASL1w), both expressed high levels of H-2K and D proteins. In contrast to what might have been predicted base on reports from other target cell systems, the more NK susceptible ASL1w cells expressed somewhat higher levels of H-2K Ag than did ASL1 cells. These results indicate that expression of H-2 class I proteins by target cells, in and of itself, is not sufficient to inhibit the lytic activity of murine NK cells.  相似文献   

13.
Pretreatment of human K562 leukemia cells with rIFN-alpha and rIFN-gamma resulted in decreased susceptibility to lysis by human peripheral blood NK cells. The reduction of NK-susceptibility after IFN treatment was not due to a general effect of IFN on the stability of the cell membrane because the susceptibility of K562 cells to lysis by antibodies plus C, distilled water, or lysolecithin was unaffected. Binding studies with effector cell preparations enriched for NK cells with large granular lymphocyte morphology revealed no difference in binding to control and IFN-gamma-treated target cells. The sensitivity to soluble NK cytotoxic factors was not affected significantly by the IFN treatment. In contrast, the susceptibility of IFN-treated target cells to the cytotoxic activity of purified cytoplasmic granules from a rat large granular lymphocyte tumor was significantly reduced, indicating that the IFN-induced resistance acted at the level of susceptibility to the lytic mechanism of NK cells. However, IFN-alpha was more effective than IFN-gamma in inducing resistance to the cytoplasmic granules although resulting in only a weak resistance in the cell-mediated cytotoxic assay. IFN-gamma but not IFN-alpha caused a reduction in the frequency of effector cells that had reoriented their Golgi apparatus toward their bound target cell. In addition, IFN-gamma treated K562 cells failed to elicit an influx of Ca2+ into effector cells. Taken together, the results suggest that IFN-gamma in addition to an increased resistance to the lytic molecules released by NK cells can also induce changes in the target cells which prevent the triggering and activation of the effector cell.  相似文献   

14.
Spontaneously cytotoxic murine lymphocytes lysed certain cell types infected by herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) better than uninfected cells. The levels of virus-directed lysis varied widely from target to target, and we found that differences in virus-directed lytic efficiency could be attributed both to the characteristics of HSV-1 replication in the different targets and to the subgroup of natural effector cells which mediated lysis. Although HSV-1 adsorbed to the surface of all the target cells, those in which the virus replicated more efficiently were lysed to a greater extent. As targets, we used cell lines that, when uninfected, were spontaneously lysed by NK cells (YAC-1) or by NC cells (WEHI-164). We also used a fibroblastoid cell line (M50) and a monocytic tumor line (PU51R), which were not spontaneously killed. Using complement-mediated elimination of Qa-5-positive or asialo-GM1-positive NK cells to distinguish NK from NC activity, we found that NK cells lysed HSV-1-infected YAC cells better than uninfected cells, and an NC-like activity selectively lysed HSV-1-infected WEHI cells. In addition, we showed that both NK and NC cytotoxicities contributed to the lysis against the HSV-1-infected fibroblastoid line, M50, but the infected PU51R cells were killed by only NK effectors. These findings were consistent with the results of experiments performed to define the role of interferon in induction of virus-augmented cytolysis. Increased lysis of YAC-HSV and PU51R-HSV was entirely due to interferon activation and was completely abolished by performing the 51Cr-release assay in the presence of anti-interferon serum. Because NC activity was not augmented by interferon, virus-enhanced NC lysis of M50-HSV and WEHI-HSV was not due to this nonspecific mechanism. Together, our data show that HSV-1 infection of NK/NC targets induces increased cytotoxicity, but the effector cell responsible for lysis is determined by the uninfected target, or by an interaction between the virus and target cell, rather than by a viral determinant alone.  相似文献   

15.
Palmitate-derivatized antibody molecules can function as surrogate receptors when incorporated into the plasma membranes of nylon wool non-adherent spleen cells. Surrogate receptor molecules are attached to the membranes by insertion of the palmitate hydrocarbon chains into the phospholipid bilayer. This mode of attachment precludes interactions between surrogate receptors and intracellular and intramembranous structures. Despite these limitations, surrogate receptors consisting of either palmitate-derivatized intact antibody molecules or their corresponding F(ab')2 fragments specific for Ag on syngeneic B lymphocytes or hapten-modified EL-4 lymphoma cells can direct cell-mediated cytotoxic activity against the appropriate target. Treatment of the surrogate receptor-decorated effector cell populations with anti-asialo GM1 plus C eliminated the observed target cell lysis, suggesting a role for NK cells in this cytolytic process. The efficiency of this surrogate receptor-mediated cellular cytotoxicity parallels that of natural receptor-mediated target cell lysis and is not limited by inherent resistance of a target cell to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Application of this technology to study the requirements for productive lytic interactions between effector and target cells may provide valuable insights into the mechanism of cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Furthermore, these results provide the rationale for future studies designed to evaluate the ability of surrogate receptors to focus cytotoxic cell activity onto a specified target in situ, in an attempted elimination of diseased cells.  相似文献   

16.
This study examines the role of cytokines in activating the effector cells to mediate slow lysis. After activation of splenocytes by alpha CD3, further culturing the cells in the absence of alpha CD3 resulted in the generation of activated killer cells (CD3-AK-) to mediate slow lysis. In contrast to fast lysis which was not affected by a PKC inhibitor H-7, slow lysis was inhibited. These findings suggested that a PKC-dependent activation phase preceded the lytic phase in slow lysis. To explore the mechanism for activating the lytic machinery in slow lysis, we examined the roles of cytokines in these reactions. First, it was found that alpha IL-2 or an alpha IL-2/alpha IL-4 combination inhibited slow lysis but had no effect on fast lysis. Secondly, IL-2, IL-4, or TNF alpha converted a noncytolytic CD3-AK- cells to mediate slow lysis, but they did not augment fast lysis. IL-2 and IL-4 had additive effect, and TNF alpha synergized with IL-2 to further augment the CD3-AK- cytolytic activity. Exogenous IL-6 and INF did not have any appreciable effect on the cytolytic activity of the killer cells. Besides TNF alpha, these cytokines were not directly cytotoxic to the target cells, indicating that they were not cytotoxic factors per se. Treatment with cycloheximide for 24 hr abrogated the cytolytic activities of CD3-AK cells, suggesting that a cytotoxic factor(s) was continuously synthesized to be stored in activated killer cells and was catabolized within 24 hr. Our results indicated that in the effector phase of slow lysis, after activating the CD3-AK- cells by the first signal (appropriate target cells), IL-2 and/or IL-4 appeared to be the second signal to initiate a cascade of events which triggered the release of other cytokines (e.g., TNF). This process resembles the secondary (memory) type of immune response. These events lead to full activation of the killer cells and converted the preformed cytotoxic factors into active form to initiate the lytic reaction and completed the lytic process.  相似文献   

17.
The sensitivity of human natural killer (NK) cell activities (both binding and killing) after exposure of peripheral blood mononuclear cells to different doses of gamma radiation was studied. A panel of monoclonal antibodies was used to identify the NK and T-lymphocyte subsets and to evaluate their radiosensitivity. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were irradiated with low (2-6 Gy) and high (10-30 Gy) doses and NK cell binding and cytotoxic activity against K562 target cells were studied after 3 h and 48 h in culture. The primary damage to NK cell activity was identified at the postbinding level and affected mainly the lytic machinery. After 48 h culture postirradiation, an overall depression of cytotoxic activity was observed, but ionizing radiation produced either a selection of the more cytotoxic NK cell subsets, which therefore might be considered more resistant to radiation damage than the less cytotoxic NK cells, or a long-term stimulation of cytotoxic activity in surviving cells.  相似文献   

18.
Treatment of mouse spleen cells with specific anti-H-2 antisera augments their natural killer (NK) activity against K562 cells but not against YAC target tumor cells. The same population of natural killer cells was found to lyse K562 as well as YAC target cells, since (a) depletion of YAC reactive NK cells by absorption on YAC monolayers resulted in a concomitant depletion of anti-K562 NK activity of mouse spleen cells, and (b) both K562 and YAC cells could inhibit their own as well as each others lysis in a cross-competition assay. Anti-H-2 antiserum could not induce anti-K562 NK activity in spleen cells previously depleted of NK cells by absorption on YAC monolayers, indicating that alloantiserum does not act by recruiting otherwise nonreactive cells to become cytotoxic toward K562 target cells. In a target-binding assay, K562 binding of NK cells (T-cell-, B-cell-, and macrophage-depleted spleen cells) increased five- to eightfold in the presence of anti-H-2 antiserum whereas YAC cells binding of NK cells was not increased. H-2 antigens per se did not appear to be involved in the alloantisera effect since anti-NK antiserum directed against a non-H-2 antigen selectively expressed on NK cells, showed a similar selective NK enhancing effect. Protein A, a reagent which binds to the Fc region of immunoglobulin molecules, completely blocked the alloantiserum induced augmentation of anti-K562 NK activity, but did not alter basal NK activity. Moreover, the F(ab)2 fraction of alloantibodies failed to enhance anti-K562 cytotoxic activity of mouse spleen cells, indicating a crucial role for the Fc portion of the alloantibodies attached to the NK cells, in NK augmentation. Utilization of several target cell lines with or without membrane Fc receptors (FcR) revealed that alloantiserum enhanced the lysis of only FcR+ target cells. It is proposed that alloantibody-coated NK cells, as a result of a secondary interaction between attached alloantibody and Fc receptors on target cells, interact more readily with the target cells and thereby cause a higher level of lytic activity.  相似文献   

19.
Following activation of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-infected B cells from latent to productive (lytic) infection, there is a concomitant reduction in the level of cell surface major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules and an impaired antigen-presenting function that may facilitate evasion from EBV-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T cells. In some other herpesviruses studied, most notably human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), evasion of virus-specific CD8+ effector responses via downregulation of surface MHC class I molecules is supplemented with specific mechanisms for evading NK cells. We now report that EBV differs from HCMV in this respect. While latently infected EBV-positive B cells were resistant to lysis by two NK lines and by primary polyclonal NK cells from peripheral blood, these effectors efficiently killed cells activated into the lytic cycle. Susceptibility to NK lysis coincided not only with downregulation of HLA-A, -B, and -C molecules that bind to the KIR family of inhibitory receptors on NK cells but also with downregulation of HLA-E molecules binding the CD94/NKG2A inhibitory receptors. Conversely, ULBP-1 and CD112, ligands for the NK cell-activating receptors NKG2D and DNAM-1, respectively, were elevated. Susceptibility of the virus-producing target cells to NK cell lysis was partially reversed by blocking ULBP-1 or CD112 with specific antibodies. These results highlight a fundamental difference between EBV and HCMV with regards to evasion of innate immunity.  相似文献   

20.
Nonspecific cytotoxic cells (NCC) may be the teleost fish equivalent of mammalian natural killer (NK) cells. Although significant differences exist between species regarding many characteristics of these cells, both NCC and NK cells share similarities: in the types of target cells sensitive to lysis; in mechanisms of target cell recognition; in the requirements for a competent lytic cycle; and both types of effectors participate in mediating the lysis of infectious microorganisms. A putative antigen binding receptor obtained from catfish NCC has now been characterized using monoclonal antibodies (mabs). This receptor is a vimentin-like protein. Preliminary studies indicate that NCC recognize a 40 kD protein on the membranes of susceptible target cells. Solubilized target cell protein can specifically bind to NCC and inhibit killing.Similar to NK cells, NCC require cell contact with the target cell to deliver the lethal cytotoxic hit. NCC appear to be the more potent cytotoxic cells because fewer are required to kill an individual target cell and less time is required for this action to occur than for NK cells. Unlike NK cells, NCC do not recycle under experimental conditions. Preliminary studies were also reviewed to characterize signal transduction responses. Monoclonal antibody against the vimentin-like protein receptor activates NCC cytotoxicity, initiates the production of significant increased levels of free cytoplasmic calcium, and causes the production of inositol lipid intermediates (specifically phosphotidylinositol 1, 4–5 trisphosphate). NCC may be important effectors of anti-parasite immunity. Although these cells probably do not elicit memory responses, data suggest that they do recognize antigen and can be activated and recruited into peripheral tissue where they mediate cytolytic responses.  相似文献   

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