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1.
Human natural killer (NK) cells show high cytotoxic activity against target cells infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). Substantial amounts of interferon (IFN) were generated in co-cultures of NK effector cells and infected target cells; however, the cytotoxic activity seen against a specific infected cell target did not correlate with the amount of IFN induced. The production of IFN increased steadily from 4 to 18 hr of co-culture, as did NK activity; however, IFN production peaked 4 hr later than NK activity. Pretreatment of NK effector cells with exogenous IFN increased cytotoxic activity against all targets tested, but the differential pattern of reactivity against cells infected with wild type and mutant viruses was unaltered. When effector cells were treated with the RNA synthesis inhibitor actinomycin D before co-culture with virus-infected targets, IFN production was markedly reduced, without a concomitant reduction in cytotoxicity. Similarly, the addition of anti-IFN antiserum to co-cultures greatly decreased the available IFN present, but had no effect on NK activity. We conclude that the induction of cytotoxic activity in co-cultures of NK effector cells and HSV-1-infected target cells is independent of the induction of IFN.  相似文献   

2.
Role of interferon in natural kill of HSV-1-infected fibroblasts   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The production of interferon during natural killer (NK) assays against HSV-1-infected fibroblasts (NK(HSV-1)) was studied to determine whether this interferon was responsible for inducing the preferential lysis of herpes-virus-infected target cells over uninfected target cells. The interferon produced during NK(HSV-1) assays was analyzed and found to have the properties of HU-IFN-alpha. Little or no IFN was produced during NK assays against uninfected fibroblasts (NK(FS)) or K562 (NK(K562)) cells. Although the appearance of interferon in the culture supernatants seemed to parallel the development of cytotoxicity during NK(HSV-1) assays, the levels of cytotoxicity and IFN generated did not correlate, arguing against a strict quantitative dependence of cytotoxicity upon IFN production. NK(K562) and NK(FS) cytotoxicity developed with little or no production of IFN. When IFN-pretreated effector cells were used, there was still a preferential lysis of infected over uninfected target cells. This preferential lysis by IFN-treated effector cells of infected over uninfected targets was seen as early as 2 hr into the assay. Anti-IFN antibodies added to the NK assays, although neutralizing all the IFN produced during the assays, had no effect on NK(FS) or NK(K562) cytotoxic activity and caused a slightly reduction of NK(HSV-1) activity only in one of three experiments. We conclude that although IFN is generated during NK(HSV-1) assays, this IFN cannot solely account for the increased lysis of infected over uninfected cells and that NK(HSV-1) activity is in some other way dependent on the virus infection.  相似文献   

3.
To assess the effects of chronic virus infection on NK cells, the related phenomena of interferon (IFN) production, NK cell activation, and resistance to tumor implants were studied in mice persistently infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). NK cells from these LCMV-carrier mice displayed augmented killing of the NK-sensitive YAC-1 target cell. They did not lyse the more resistant targets L-929 and P815, whereas NK cells from acutely infected mice efficiently lysed all three cell types. The plasma from LCMV-carrier mice contained an antiviral substance identified as IFN type I, based on species specificity, virus nonspecificity, resistance to pH 2, and sensitivity to antibody to type I IFN. IFN titers in plasma from LCMV-carrier mice were 32 to 64 U/ml, about 20-fold less than those in acutely infected mice. Both the IFN and NK cell levels continuously remained elevated in the LCMV carrier mice up to at least 6 months of age. IFN is known to activate NK cells and to induce their blastogenesis in vivo. As determined by centrifugal elutriation, large NK blast-size cells were isolated from the spleens of acutely infected mice, but not from either normal or LCMV-carrier mice, suggesting augmented NK cell-mediated lysis in the absence of enhanced proliferation. Poly inosinic-cytidylic acid induced high levels of NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity and blastogenesis in both control and LCMV-carrier mice, but IFN was induced to lower levels in carriers as compared with controls. Coincidental with augmented NK cell activity, the LCMV-carrier mice rejected intravenously injected 125IUdR-labeled tumor cells more efficiently than did normal mice. Thus, LCMV carrier mice have low levels of type I IFN, moderately augmented NK cell activity lasting for at least 6 months, and increased resistance to tumor cell implants. This indicates that augmented NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity can be maintained in vivo over prolonged periods of time in the presence of chronic low-level IFN stimulation.  相似文献   

4.
Pretreatment of human large granular lymphocytes (LGL) or unseparated peripheral blood mononuclear cells with interferon (IFN) resulted in a significant augmentation of natural killer (NK) activity. This increase was paralleled by an increase in the 2'-5'A synthetase activity. In order to investigate the possibility that IFN might be inducing augmentation of NK cells via the 2'-5'A pathway, we tested the effects of nonphosphorylated core material [(A2'p)2A] and of the triphosphorylated form of the 2'-5'A [ppp(A2'p)2A]. The core material had no detectable effect on NK activity. In contrast, when experiments were performed with the triphosphorylated form of 2'-5'A, NK activity was stimulated. In order to achieve activation, permeabilization of LGL with calcium chloride was necessary and, under these conditions, a dose-dependent augmentation of NK activity was seen. However, the calcium treatment had considerable toxic effects on basal levels of NK activity. Collectively, these results suggest that IFN may be inducing augmentation of NK activity via the 2'-5'A pathway. Further studies will be necessary to determine the effects of IFN and/or 2'-5'A on subsequent activation steps in the process leading to cytotoxicity by NK cells.  相似文献   

5.
Cord blood lymphocytes (CBL) were compared with adult peripheral blood lymphocytes (a-PBL) for their: (i) natural killer (NK) and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxic (ADCC) activities, (ii) target-binding capacity, (iii) ability to induce soluble natural killer cytotoxic factor (NKCF), (iv) interferon (IFN)-, interleukin 2 (IL-2)-, and lectin-induced augmentation of NK activity, and (v) ability to produce IFN against tumor targets in vitro. CBL depleted of adherent cells and Percoll-separated, NK-enriched subpopulations demonstrated significantly lower NK, ADCC, and target-binding activities compared to a-PBL. CBL produced significantly lower levels of NKCF directed against K562 tumor targets in comparison with a-PBL. Although the NK activity of CBL was not stimulated by either IFN or IL-2 to the same levels shown by a-PBL, the percentage enhancement of cytotoxicity of CBL by IFN and IL-2 was greater than that of a-PBL. Lectin-induced enhancement of cytotoxicity was significantly greater for CBL in comparison with a-PBL. Further, the ability of CBL lymphocytes to produce IFN-gamma in vitro against K562 target cells was significantly lower than that of adult PBL. These studies suggest an association between decreased NK, ADCC, and target-binding activities, induction of NKCF and IFN production by CBL, and increased susceptibility of neonates to infection.  相似文献   

6.
Mononuclear cells isolated from peripheral blood (PB) of patients with malignant melanoma and head and neck cancer were tested for natural killer (NK) cell activity against K562 targets. Significantly lower levels of NK activity were observed in patients with malignant melanoma with metastatic disease in comparison to stage I and control population. In head and neck cancer NK activity was normal in tumor stage 1-2 and significantly impaired in stage 3-4. Mononuclear cells (MNC) isolated from primary tumor-draining lymph nodes (LNs) had significant NK activity in 12 of 25 (48%) of melanoma and 9 of 19 (47%) of head and neck lymph nodes at E:T 40:1. Reactivity was always significantly lower than in autochthonous Preincubation (+37 degrees C, 18 h) of lymph node mononuclear cells (LNMNC) resulted in a significant increase in cytotoxicity in 36% of melanoma and 32% of head and neck LNs. Simultaneous incubation with interferon (IFN)-alpha resulted in 24% of melanoma and 44% of head and neck LNs in a significant further augmentation of NK activity. LNMNC were furthermore found to react in 2-24% (mean 7.79 +/- 2.1) with the monoclonal antibody HNK-1, which identifies a certain proportion of NK cells. No correlation was found between percentage HNK-1+ cells and the expression of NK activity. From these studies it may be concluded that tumor draining LNs contain cells which are active against K562 targets expressing low but variable levels of cytotoxicity. NK cell activity can be increased by incubation of LNMNC at 37 degrees C with or without addition of IFN. These results suggest that modulation of NK activity in tumor draining LNs might be achieved by local application of biological response modifiers, which might finally lead to an increase of local tumor defense mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
The relative roles of interferon (IFN) and natural killer (NK) cells in herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infection of mice were examined. Adoptive transfer of adult mouse leukocytes into 4- to 6-day-old suckling mice protected the recipients from HSV-1 infection, as judged by viral titers in the spleen 2 days postinfection. Protection was mediated by several classes of leukocytes, including those depleted of NK cell activity by antibody to asialo GM1 and those depleted of macrophages by size separation. Mice receiving these leukocytes produced significantly higher levels of IFN 6 hr postinfection (early IFN) than did HSV-1-infected mice not receiving donor leukocytes. Antibody to IFN, under conditions that blocked early but not late IFN synthesis, greatly enhanced HSV-1 synthesis in mice receiving leukocytes and completely removed the protective effect mediated by leukocytes. High doses of anti-asialo GM1 blocked both NK cell activity and early IFN production and resulted in high titers of HSV-1. This effect on virus synthesis was not seen if mice were given antibody 1 day postinfection. Lower doses of anti-asialo GM1, which still depleted NK cell activity but had no effect on early IFN production, did not enhance HSV-1 synthesis. Depletion of NK cell activity with a low dose of antibody had no effect on the reduced HSV-1 synthesis resulting from prophylactic IFN treatment or on the enhanced HSV-1 synthesis resulting from antibody to IFN treatment. Thus, resistance to acute HSV-1 infection in mice correlates with early IFN production but not with NK cell activity, suggesting that NK cells are not major mediators of natural resistance in this model and that the antiviral effect of IFN is not mediated by NK cells.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Lymphocytes isolated from axillary lymph nodes draining breast carcinoma were tested for natural killer (NK) activity against K562 in a 4-h 51Cr-release assay, and the in vitro effects of interferon (IFN) and OK432 (a streptococcal preparation) on their cytotoxicity were examined in comparison with NK activity of autologous peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). The levels of NK activity were lower in lymph node lymphocytes (LNL) than in PBL of the same patients. Significant levels of LNL-mediated lysis were recorded in 14 of 42 (33%) lymph node samples and in nine of 14 (64%) patients. Purification of large granular lymphocytes (LGL) from lymph node cells by discontinuous Percoll density gradient centrifugation resulted in an induction or enhancement of cytotoxic activity, with no reactivity in LGL-depleted, small T-lymphocyte populations. Positive reactions were observed with 10 of 13 (77%) LGL samples. The low reactivity of LNL was not attributable to coexistent suppressor cells for NK function, since lymph node cells failed to suppress NK activity of normal PBL. Partially purified human IFN and OK432 augmented NK activity of patients' PBL in approximately 70% and 90% of the cases, respectively, while LNL-mediated lysis was augmented in only 7% and 36% of the lymph node samples by IFN and OK432, respectively. These results indicate that K562-reactive NK cells and/or their precursors may frequently be present at subthreshold levels in the lymph nodes draining breast carcinoma, and that the augmentation of LNL-mediated cytotoxicity by OK432 might provide a local potentiation of natural immune function at the host-tumor interface rather than IFN.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanism by which interferon (IFN) pretreatment of effector cells augments natural killer (NK) cell-mediated cytotoxicity (CMC) was examined by determining whether IFN has any effect on the production of natural killer cytotoxic factors (NKCF). NKCF are released into the supernatant of co-cultures of murine spleen cells and YAC-1 stimulator cells, and their lytic activity is measured against YAC-1 target cells. It was demonstrated that pretreatment of effector cells with murine fibroblast IFN or polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid (pIC) resulted in the release of NKCF with augmented lytic activity. Evidence indicated that the IFN-induced augmentation of NKCF activity required protein synthesis during the IFN pretreatment period, because concurrent pretreatment with both IFN and cycloheximide abrogated the IFN effect. Protein synthesis, however, is not required for the production of base levels of NKCF because emetine pretreatment of normal spleen cells did not result in a decrease in NKCF production. Furthermore, substantial levels of NKCF activity could be detected in freeze-thaw lysates of freshly isolated spleen cells. Cell populations enriched for NK effector cells, such as nylon wool-nonadherent nude mouse spleen cells, produced lysates with high levels of NKCF activity, whereas lysates of CBA thymocytes were devoid of NKCF activity. Pretreatment of spleen cells with either IFN or pIC resulted in an augmentation of the NKCF activity present in their cell lysates. Taken altogether, these findings suggest that freshly isolated NK cells contain preformed pools of NKCF. Pretreatment of these cells with IFN causes de novo synthesis of additional NKCF and/or activation of preexisting NKCF. According to our model for the mechanism of NK CMC, target cell lysis is ultimately the result of transfer of NKCF from the effector cell to the target cell. The evidence presented here suggests that the IFN-induced augmentation of NK activity could be accounted for by an increase in the synthesis, activation, and/or release of NKCF.  相似文献   

10.
In the accompanying paper, we showed that natural killer (NK) cells were a major population in the naive spleens of normal mice that responded directly to a T cell growth factor, interleukin 2 (IL 2), and clonally replicated without other stimulating agents. The cloned cells growing in IL 2 showed a potent NK activity against several NK targets without addition of an NK-activating agent, interferon (IFN). In the present study, therefore, we examined whether these cloned NK cells on their own produced IFN. It was found that all NK clones growing in IL 2 produced IFN in the culture fluids. The titers of IFN produced in the IL 2-containing media correlated well with the number of growing cells. With the culture in the absence of IL 2, neither cell growth nor IFN production could be detected. Addition of Con A into the culture in the IL 2-free media showed no IFN production. The antiserum neutralizing IFN alpha and IFN beta failed to significantly neutralize IFN produced by NK clones. Treatment with either a pH of 2.0 or antiserum neutralizing mouse IFN gamma resulted in a marked reduction of IL 2-induced NK IFN, indicating that a major part of IFN produced was IFN gamma. These results indicate that IL 2 stimulates NK clones to proliferate, accompanied by IFN gamma production. The results also show that an NK clone, when stimulated with Sendai virus, produced a type 1 IFN (IFN alpha and/or IFN beta), suggesting that murine NK cells can produce both type 1 (alpha and/or beta) and type 2 (gamma) IFN, depending on inducers.  相似文献   

11.
Interleukin 2 (IL 2) has been shown to be a potent stimulator of natural killer (NK) cells. In the present studies, partially purified mouse and human IL 2 preparations were also found to induce interferon (IFN) from mouse spleen cells. By the criteria of sensitivity to treatment at pH 2 and failure to be neutralized by a potent anti-alpha, beta IFN serum, the species of IFN produced was of type gamma. Cooperation between two types of cell, a macrophage and an NK-like cell, was required for IFN production by murine spleen cells treated with IL 2. The requirement for macrophages could be replaced with supernatant obtained by incubating macrophages for 24 hr with lymphokine preparations containing IL 2. Interestingly, mature T cells apparently played no role in the process. Furthermore, the beige (bg/bg) mutation, which severely impairs NK cell lytic activity, had no effect on the ability of NK-like cells to participate in IFN production. Cell fractionation experiments revealed no dissociation between the requirements for augmentation of NK cytotoxic activity and for IFN production, and it is concluded that at least a portion of the NK boosting induced by IL 2-containing preparations is mediated through gamma-IFN.  相似文献   

12.
The syngeneic mixed lymphocyte reaction (SMLR) was assayed in the medium containing syngeneic normal mouse serum (NMS), by using nylon-adherent stimulator cells and nonadherent responder T cells, which were prepared from murine spleens in the absence of fetal calf serum (FCS) to avoid any sensitization to xenogeneic protein antigens. The responder cells in this SMLR, without definite background proliferation, generated specific proliferative response to the syngeneic stimulator cells in a dose-related fashion. The SMLR was accompanied by production of interleukin 3 (IL 3) but not interleukin 2 (IL 2) or interferon (IFN). No cytotoxicity against the syngeneic or allogeneic target cells was induced. Correlating with no production of IL 2 or IFN, no natural killer (NK) activity was detected. The proliferation was not inhibited by addition of specific antiserum for IFN-gamma. In contrast, proliferation in the responder cells when incubated with allogeneic stimulator cells was inhibited by anti-IFN-gamma serum and accompanied by production of IL 2 and IFN as well as IL 3, and by augmentation of NK activity and generation of cytotoxic T cells. Cell surface analysis revealed that the cells producing IL 3 in this SMLR system were Thy-1+ Lyt-1+2- helper T cells. Cells responding to the SMLR culture fluids with DNA replication were Thy-1-Lyt-1-2- asialo GM1- no-marker cells, which were the same as a population responsible for partially purified IL 3. On the other hand, when the responder cells were exposed to FCS before culture and assayed for SMLR in the FCS-free NMS medium, variable levels of IL 2 production were induced in response to the stimulator cells. The responder cells generated a high background DNA replication in the absence of syngeneic stimulators, suggesting that this IL 2 production may result from the stimulation of T cells by FCS as a foreign antigen. Overall, these results suggest that the SMLR may be a cellular interaction, in which non-T cells stimulate Lyt-1+2- helper T cells to produce IL 3 but not IL 2 or IFN. This IL 3 can, in turn, induce proliferation of IL 3 responding cells, which appear to be early precursors in lymphocyte differentiation, but no proliferative response or activation of IL 2- and IFN-dependent mature T cells or NK cells.  相似文献   

13.
NK activity in mice is high between about 6 and 10 weeks of age. In contrast, infant mice and mice older than 12-14 weeks of age usually have quite low or undetectable NK activity. Studies were performed to analyze the mechanisms underlying this characteristic age-related regulation of NK activity. Spleen cells from infant mice did not develop appreciable NK activity upon incubation for 12-18 h with either interferon (IFN) or interleukin-2 (IL-2). Analysis of the frequency of IL-2-dependent progenitors of NK cells, in a limiting dilution assay, also indicated that the spleens of infant mice are deficient in precursors of NK cells. In contrast, spleen cells from old mice (30 weeks old) developed substantial levels of NK activity upon incubation with either IFN or IL-2, and they showed a frequency of IL-2-dependent progenitors of effector cells that was similar to that of young mice. Both infant and old mice had plastic-adherent suppressor cells in their spleens, which could strongly inhibit NK activity. In addition, both infant and old mouse spleen cells contained nonadherent suppressor cells, which had a higher density on Percoll gradients than NK cells. Thus, several factors appear to contribute to the age-related regulation of NK activity in mice.  相似文献   

14.
It has previously been shown that monoclonal antigen-specific mouse CTL lines can be induced to express cytolytic activity with the same specificity as that of splenic natural killer (NK) cells following culture in high concentrations of concanavalin A-induced spleen cell supernatants. In the present experiments, we made use of this in vitro system to explore the regulation of NK activity at the clonal level. Interferon-alpha and interferon-beta and interleukin 2 (IL 2) were potent inducers of NK activity in CTL, demonstrating that these substances can activate NK functions directly without the participation of other cell types. By comparison, IFN-gamma was a poor activator of NK activity in CTL (and also in fresh spleen cells). Three major differences between induction of NK activity by IFN-alpha,beta and IL 2 were noted: IFN induced NK activity selectively without affecting specific cytolysis, whereas IL 2 also enhanced specific killing; IFN acted much more rapidly than IL 2; and IFN did not induce the cells to enter the cell cycle nor were there any obvious morphologic changes. Specific antigen was also a strong inducer of NK activity in CTL, but studies with antisera against the various classes of IFN revealed that this effect was mediated, at least in part, via the release of IFN-beta. By contrast, the same antisera had no effect on NK induction by crude TCGF or by highly purified IL 2, indicating that the regulation of NK activity by IL 2 occurs at the clonal level in an IFN-independent manner. Although, IL 2, IFN, and Ag could apparently act alone to induce NK activity, much greater (synergistic) induction was obtained by various combinations of these regulators, suggesting that the delivery of two (or more) signals to the responder cell was required for full expression of the NK state. As with fresh splenic NK cells, the induced NK state in cloned CTL was intrinsically labile as revealed by its rapid decay in the absence of inducers, but it could nonetheless be maintained indefinitely at very high levels in the continued presence of inducers. This clonal system thus displays a responsiveness to regulatory signals exactly analogous to that of splenic NK cells and provides a unique and exciting opportunity to evaluate the biochemistry of the regulation of NK activity.  相似文献   

15.
We have previously reported that mouse bone marrow (BM) cells stimulated with alloantigen produce cytotoxic effector T-cell activity and produce interferon (IFN-)alpha/beta. In this report we show evidence suggesting that interleukin 2 (IL-2) may play a role in this IFN-alpha/beta production by alloantigen-stimulated BM cells. Alloantigen-induced IFN production by bone marrow cells was completely inhibited when cultures were supplemented with antisera to IL-2. Cell-free supernatants obtained at 2 days from cultures containing C57BL/6 BM cells and irradiated DBA/2J spleen cells were also shown to contain low levels of IL-2 activity and induced significant IFN production in fresh BM cells. Different IL-2 preparations were tested for their ability to induce IFN-alpha/beta production in mouse BM cells. Mouse BM cells cultured with recombinant human IL-2 or highly purified mouse IL-2 produced high levels of IFN-alpha/beta activity after 2-3 days of culture with significant IFN activity being detected as early as 24 hr of culture. IL-2-induced IFN-alpha/beta production was partially resistant to irradiation. In contrast, irradiated (2000 rad) bone marrow cells failed to produce any IFN when cultured with alloantigen in the absence of IL-2. T-cell-depleted BM cells or BM cells obtained from C57BL/10 nude mice produced high levels of IFN-alpha/beta following stimulation with IL-2. In addition, bone marrow cells depleted of Ia+, Qa 5+, or Asialo GM+1 cells produced IFN in response to IL-2. Thus, neither T cells nor NK cells are required for IL-2-induced IFN-alpha/beta production by BM cells. The action of IL-2 on bone marrow cells to induce IFN production was mediated by the classical IL-2 receptor, since monoclonal antibodies to the IL-2 receptor present on T cells blocked this response and since bone marrow cells depleted of IL-2 receptor-bearing cells failed to produce IFN when cultured with IL-2. These results suggest that non-T cells resident in the BM have receptors for IL-2 and can produce IFN-alpha/beta upon stimulation by IL-2. Since IFN has been shown to affect different aspects of hematopoiesis, the production of IFN by BM cells stimulated by IL-2 may be important in the control of hematopoiesis. In addition, IL-2-induced IFN production may play a role in graft-versus-host disease.  相似文献   

16.
17.
In this study we demonstrated that human NK cells activated by IFN or poly I:C were partially resistant to suppression by PGE2, PGD2, PGA2, PGI2, dibutyryl cAMP, isoproterenol, and theophylline. This partial loss of inhibition was not due to endogenous PG production because the addition of indomethacin to cultures stimulated with IFN or poly I:C did not prevent the partial loss of sensitivity to PGE2. NK cells incubated in the presence of PGE2 overnight, however, were not sensitive to inhibition. IFN or poly I:C did not stimulate PG synthesis nor elevate intracellular cAMP levels of NK cells. On the other hand, IFN or poly I:C diminished the accumulation of intracellular cAMP levels in NK cells in response to PGE2 stimulation. Dibutyryl cAMP and theophylline suppressed the cytolytic activity of the unstimulated cells more than that of the activated cells. A possible mechanism for the IFN-induced unresponsiveness to PGE2 may be a compartmentalized loss of cAMP responsiveness. Cycloheximide, puromycin, emetine, and actinomycin D blocked NK activation by IFN and poly I:C as well as the acquisition of resistance to PGE2-mediated suppression.  相似文献   

18.
Pretreatment of lymphocytes (16 hr, 37 degrees C) with adrenaline at final concentrations of 10(-7) to 10(-9) M, followed by removal of the drug, increased natural killer (NK) cell activity vs K562 leukemic cells in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay. The most efficient concentration of adrenaline was 10(-8) M; mean increase of NK activity over base-line activity for all donors examined was 30%. However, the individual response to adrenaline pretreatment was variable; in some donors, the effect was equal to maximal interferon (IFN) stimulation. Effects of adrenaline pretreatment were consistently reduced to base-line activity by co-incubation with the nonselective beta-adrenoceptor antagonist propranolol at 100-fold higher concentrations. The enhancing effect of adrenaline (10(-8) M) pretreatment was also observed after 1-hr pretreatment; this effect was prevented by simultaneous incubation with propranolol but was not affected by dex-propranolol. Direct addition of adrenaline to lymphocyte/target cell mixtures was inhibitory at 10(-6) M adrenaline concentration. The inhibitory effect of adrenaline in this assay was again completely prevented by propranolol and unaffected by dex-propranolol. The observed stimulatory effect of adrenaline pretreatment could not be ascribed to IFN production. Data presented indicate a dual effect of adrenaline on NK cell activity and suggest both a positive and a negative beta-adrenoceptor-mediated regulation of human NK cells.  相似文献   

19.
Interferon (IFN)-inducing activity of hydrogen peroxide in human peripheral mononuclear cells was investigated. Among the mononuclear cells, purified nonadherent cells produced IFN, but not B cells and monocytes. The maximal titer of IFN by purified nonadherent cells was observed after a 72-hr cultivation in the presence of 10(-2) mM H2O2 without affecting their viability. Furthermore, the purified nonadherent cells, but not the unpurified mononuclear cells, showed an augmented cytotoxicity to K562 when stimulated with hydrogen peroxide. By using Percoll discontinuous density gradient centrifugation, peripheral blood nonphagocytic and nonadherent mononuclear cells were divided into the low and high density fractions for which natural killer (NK) cells and T cells were enriched, respectively. The NK-enriched low density fractions, but not the T cell-enriched high density fractions, showed IFN production by the stimulation of hydrogen peroxide. IFN production as well as large granular lymphocytes and HNK-1+, Leu-11+ cells of the NK-enriched fractions were abrogated by treatment of the cells with monoclonal antibody against human NK cells (HNK-1+) but not against T cells (OKT3) in the presence of complement. Moreover, hydrogen peroxide-inducing IFN production seems to be regulated by monocytes. The antiserum neutralizing IFN-alpha and IFN-beta failed to neutralize substantially IFN-produced NK cells. The treatment with either pH 2 or antiserum-neutralizing human IFN-gamma resulted in marked reduction, indicating that a major part of IFN was IFN-gamma. The purified nonadherent cells showed IFN production and augmented cytotoxicity when cultured separately from activated macrophages by opsonized zymosan; furthermore, both IFN production and enhancement of cytotoxicity were abrogated by catalase. These results suggest that both exogenous and endogenous hydrogen peroxide might be responsible for a part of immunoregulation.  相似文献   

20.
Human adherent peripheral blood mononuclear cells were cytotoxic in vitro against the murine TU5 line in a 48-hr [3H]thymidine-release assay. Monocyte-enriched adherent cell preparations contain a small and variable (usually less than 5%) contamination with large granular lymphocytes as assessed by morphology and staining with monoclonal antibody markers B73.1 and HNK1. To assess whether killing was in fact mediated by monocytes, mononuclear cells or monocyte-enriched preparations were separated using monoclonal antibodies directed against mononuclear phagocytes (Mo2, UCHM1, B44.1) or natural killer (NK) cells (B73.1 and HNK1), and a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. Cells positive for monocyte markers were highly cytotoxic against TU5, whereas negative cells were not. B73.1+ or HNK1+ cells had little or no activity. Cytotoxicity of cells positive for monocyte markers (Mo2, UCHM1, B44.1) was augmented by in vitro exposure to lymphokines or less frequently to interferon (IFN). However, cells negative for these monocytes markers were also stimulated to kill TU5 by lymphokine or IFN to an extent similar or greater than that of positive ones. IFN or lymphokines induced killing of TU5 by monocyte-depleted, B73.1-positive, lymphoid cells. These observations demonstrate that human monocytes do kill tumor cells, either in the absence of deliberate stimulation or after exposure to agents such as lymphokines. However, the possible contribution to "monocyte" cytotoxicity of minor NK cell contaminants must be taken into account particularly when agents such as IFN and lymphokines are applied, even when a relatively NK-cell-resistant target such as TU5 is used.  相似文献   

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