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1.
That M1/70, a monoclonal anti-murine macrophage antibody, recognizes murine natural killer cells (NK) and that there is an increase in NK following intraperitoneal infection with live Listeria monocytogenes (LM) was previously reported. Here, LM-induced NK cells were further characterized with respect to tumor target specificity and the expression of murine mast cell, mononuclear phagocyte, and lymphocyte differentiation antigens plus human NK-associated antigens. The M1/70-selected NK (Mac 1 NK) lysed Yac 1, RLmale 1, and WEHI 164.1, but not EL 4 or WTS cells. Immunoprecipitation with M1/70 demonstrated that Mac 1, the antigen recognized by M1/70, was present on NK and thioglycollate-elicited macrophages. Contaminating macrophages in the NK-enriched population did not account for the immunoprecipitated Mac 1. Mac 1 NK that lysed Yac 1 displayed Qa 5, LFA 1, asialo GM 1, Ly 5.1, and NK 1.2, but not Lyt 1, Lyt 2, Mac 2, Mac 3, or Mac 4. Thirty percent of these Mac 1 NK bore Thy 1.2. The presence of Thy 1.2 did not correlate with individual lytic efficiency or cell cycle. Antibodies to human NK antigens Leu 7, Leu 11a, and Leu 15 did not recognize LM-induced NK cells.  相似文献   

2.
To determine whether natural killer (NK) cells are involved in the regulation of hematopoiesis, well-characterized, cell sorter-purified NK cells were incubated with syngeneic bone marrow, and the effect of this interaction on the development of various hematopoietic progenitors was assessed. NK cells were obtained from the peritoneal exudates of CBA/J mice after i.p. infection with live Listeria monocytogenes (LM). These NK cells were nylon wool-nonadherent and were purified by using M1/70, a rat anti-murine macrophage monoclonal antibody, and a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS). Syngeneic bone marrow was incubated overnight with these M1/70-purified NK cells. The cells were then assayed in vitro to determine the effect on the colony formation of the following hematopoietic progenitor cells: the myeloid progenitor that produces mixed granulocyte/macrophage colonies (CFU-G/M), the myeloid progenitor that is committed to macrophage differentiation (CFU-M), and the early erythroid progenitor that is known as the burst-forming unit-erythroid (BFU-E). The marrow cells, after incubation with NK cells, were also injected into lethally irradiated syngeneic recipients to assay for the splenic colony formation capacity of the trilineage myeloid stem cell (CFU-S). Although the formation of BFU-E-, CFU-G/M-, and CFU-M-derived colonies was not adversely affected by the exposure of syngeneic bone marrow to purified NK cells, there was a dramatic decrease in the number of CFU-S-derived colonies. Incubation with NK-depleted cells did not result in an inhibition of colony formation by the CFU-S. Mixing experiments showed that the M1/70-labeled NK cells exerted their effect directly on the CFU-S and not on any accessory cells. The effect of the NK cells on colony formation by the CFU-S could be blocked competitively and selectively by the addition, before incubation, of a classic murine NK tumor target, Yac-1. Another tumor line (WTS) that is poorly recognized by NK cells was less effective in blocking the inhibitory effect of NK cells on CFU-S. The demonstration that purified NK cells can selectively inhibit the development of the tripotential CFU-S may point to the importance of NK cells in the regulation of hematopoiesis, in the development of some types of marrow dysfunction, and in the failure of engraftment of transplanted bone marrow.  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of intensive training for competitive sports on natural killer (NK) cell lytic activity and subset distribution. Eight female college-level volleyball players undertook 1 mo of heavy preseason training. Volleyball drills were performed 5 h/day, 6 days/wk. Morning resting blood samples were collected before training (Pre), on the 10th day of training (During), 1 day before the end of training (End), and 1 wk after intensive training had ceased (Post). CD3(-)CD16(bright)CD56(dim) (CD56(dim) NK), CD3(-)CD16(dim/-)CD56(bright) NK (CD56(bright) NK), and CD3(+)CD16(-)CD56(dim) (CD56(dim) T) cells in peripheral blood were determined by flow cytometry. The circulating count of CD56(dim) NK cells (the predominant population, with a high cytotoxicity) did not change, nor did the counts for other leukocyte subsets. However, counts for CD56(bright) NK and CD56(dim) T cells (subsets with a lower cytotoxicity) increased significantly (P < 0.01) in response to the heavy training. Overall NK cell cytotoxicity decreased from Pre to End (P = 0.002), with a return to initial values at Post. Lytic units per NK cell followed a similar pattern (P = 0.008). Circulating levels of interleukin-6, interferon-gamma, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha remained unchanged. These results suggest that heavy training can decrease total NK cell cytotoxicity as well as lytic units per NK cell. Such effects may reflect in part an increase in the proportion of circulating NK cells with a low cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the distribution of liver NK cells in mice of various ages and their cytotoxicity against regenerating hepatocytes. Liver NK cells were identified by asialo GM1 antibody in mononuclear cell suspension from the liver, whereas NK activity was assayed against YAC-1 target cells. Mononuclear cells in the liver consisted of more than 25% NK cells with potent NK activity in C3H/He mice, 8 wk of age. The strain-specific distribution (C3H/He greater than C57BL/6 greater than DBA/2) of liver NK cells was the same as those in the spleen and blood. The proportion of liver NK cells and the level of NK activity in C3H/He mice were further demonstrated to vary depending on age, in that both the proportion and the function were generated at 4 wk of age, reached a maximum between the 6th and 8th wk, and then rapidly decreased around the 9th wk. The appearance of an increased number of NK cells in the liver seemed to coincide with the slowing of the rapid increase of murine liver weight. We then investigated whether liver NK cells mediated their cytotoxicity against regenerating hepatocytes. Both specific 51Cr-release assay and single cell cytotoxicity assay demonstrated that liver NK cells were significantly cytotoxic against regenerating hepatocytes in partially hepatectomized liver, but to a lesser extent against normal hepatocytes in resting liver. Morphologic study revealed that normal liver predominantly consisted of hepatocytes with binuclei (greater than 60%) but that regenerating liver mainly consisted of hepatocytes with a single nucleus (greater than 70%). One-nucleus hepatocytes were more susceptible to the cytotoxicity of liver NK cells. A comparative study of restoration kinetics of the liver weight and the number of liver NK cells after partial hepatectomy also showed a unique relationship. These results raise the possibility that liver NK cells might be responsible for regulating hepatocyte growth.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies from this laboratory have demonstrated a large influx of null lymphocytes into the murine decidua during pregnancy. We had also shown that trophoblast cells of the murine placenta bear target structures recognized by NK cells. Since NK lineage cells belong to the null category of lymphocytes, we examined whether cells of this lineage appear in the murine decidua, and if so, whether their activity is locally regulated by NK suppressor cells. We further investigated the identity of the suppressor cells as well as their suppressor products. NK lineage cells, irrespective of their activation status, were identified morphologically in radioautographic preparations as the non-T, non-B (null) lymphocytes capable of binding YAC-1 lymphoma targets. NK activity of nucleated cells was measured with a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay against labeled YAC-1 targets. Studies with outbred CD1 mice, and to a smaller extent, inbred CBA mice revealed that the incidence of NK lineage cells remained fairly constant within the decidua throughout pregnancy, but their activity decreased steadily to negligible levels by Day 12-14 of gestation. This was found to result from an inactivation caused by NK-suppressor cells in the decidua. A mixing of Ficoll-Paque-separated nucleated cells of the decidua with normal splenic effector cells (at 1:1 ratio) led to a suppression of their NK activity tested immediately or after a 20-hr coculture. This suppression was MHC unrestricted. Suppressor cells were identified both in plastic nonadherent fraction highly enriched for typical decidual cells as well as in the plastic adherent fraction containing decidual cells and macrophages. Addition of indomethacin (10(-5) M), an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis, or anti PGE2 antibody, revived the NK activity in the mixed population, as well as in the decidua, suggesting a PGE2-mediated suppression. High levels of PGE2 were detectable in decidual cell supernatants with a sensitive radioimmunoassay. Addition of pure PGE2 (10(-7)-10(-6) M) but not PGF2 alpha (10(-6) M) during the NK assay or to the effector cells for a 20-hr period prior to the assay led to an inhibition of NK activity. These results reveal that NK cells appearing in the murine decidua are progressively inactivated by PGE2 produced by decidual cells and decidual macrophages.  相似文献   

6.
The natural killer (NK) cell activity of splenocytes and recycling capacity of NK cells were observed by combining the 51Cr-release cytotoxicity assay and single cell cytotoxicity assay against YAC-1. The ICR mice were infected intranasally with Naegleria fowleri, that is a pathogenic free-living amoeba. The mice infected with 1 x 10(5) trophozoites showed mortality rate of 76.7% and mean survival time of 12.9 days. The cytotoxic activity of NK cells in infected mice was significantly higher than that of non-infected mice during the period between 12 hours and day 3 after infection, and highest on day 1. The target-binding capacity of NK cells in infected mice was not different from that of non-infected ones. Maximal killing potential and maximal recycling capacity were remarkably increased in infected mice as compared with the control. The results obtained in this observation indicated that elevated NK cell activity in mice infected with N. fowleri was not due to target-binding capacity of NK cells but due to the increased activity of NK cells and increased recycling capacity of individual NK cells.  相似文献   

7.
The natural killer cell activity of splenocytes and TBC, active NK cells, recycling capacity of natural killer cells were observed by means of both the 51Cr-release cytotoxicity assay and single cell cytotoxicity assay against YAC-1. C3H/HeJ mice were infected intranasally with 1 x 10(4) or 1 x 10(5) trophozoites of pathogenic Acanthamoeba culbertsoni. The infected mice showed mortality rate of 34% in 1 x 10(4) group and 65% in 1 x 10(5) group, and mean survival time was 16.40 +/- 3.50 and 13.20 +/- 4.09 days respectively. The cytotoxic activity of natural killer cells of the 2 groups was significantly higher than that of non-infected mice from the 12th hour to the 2nd day after infection, showing the highest on the first day. On the 10th day after infection, the cytotoxic activity of natural killer cells was significantly suppressed as compared with that of the control. There was no significant difference in NK cell cytotoxicity between two infected groups. The target-binding capacity and active NK cells of natural killer cells in 1 x 10(5) trophozoite infected mice was significantly increased on the 12th hour and the first day after infection as compared with the control group. Maximal recycling capacity (MRC) was not changed during the observation period. The present results indicated that the elevation of natural killer cell activity in the mice infected with A. culbertsoni was due to elevation of target-binding capacity and increased active NK cells of natural killer cells, and not due to the maximal recycling capacity of the individual NK cell, and there was no difference between two experimental dose groups.  相似文献   

8.
Addition of serotonin to mixtures of target cells and natural killer (NK)-enriched human mononuclear cells (MNC) in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay strongly augmented NK cell cytotoxicity (NKCC) vs K562, Chang, or Molt-4 target cells. The effect was dose dependent at serotonin concentrations of 10(-4) to 10(-7) M, expressed at several effector to target cell ratios, and required the presence of accessory monocytes. A 5-HT1-specific receptor agonist, 8-OH-DPAT, mimicked the enhancing properties of serotonin with similar potency. Equimolar concentrations of the mixed 5-HT1/5-HT2 receptor antagonist cyproheptadine, but not the 5-HT2-specific antagonist ketanserin, completely blocked the serotonin-induced NKCC enhancement. Monocyte/NK cell mixtures incubated with serotonin for 1 hr produced a soluble factor that could enhance the cytotoxicity of autologous, NK-enriched cells depleted of monocytes, which did not respond to serotonin alone. The factor displayed no IFN or IL 2 activity as judged by the lack of antiviral activity and inability to support the growth of an IL 2-dependent cell line. In the presence of monocytes, serotonin (10(-5) M) was considerably more effective than human IFN-alpha or IFN-gamma at optimal concentrations and was about equally effective as IL 2 at a final concentration of 50 U/ml in a short-term NK assay. The potency and efficacy for serotonin were similar to that earlier reported for histamine in monocyte-containing effector cells. The NKCC-enhancing effect of serotonin was additive to that induced by IFN-alpha, IFN-gamma, or IL 2, but not to histamine. The presented data suggest an earlier unrecognized, serotonin receptor-mediated regulation of human NK cells.  相似文献   

9.
Inhibition of natural killer cell activity by IgA   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The in vitro effect of IgA on natural killer (NK) activities of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells was investigated. Purified myeloma polymeric IgA2 (pIgA2) and secretory IgA (S-IgA) from human colostrum inhibited NK activity, while myeloma polymeric IgA1 (pIgA1), monomeric IgA1 (mIgA1), IgG, and IgM were ineffective. Inhibition was proportional to the concentration of pIgA2 (0.125-1 mg/ml) and was observed after as little as 1 hr of incubation at various effector to K562 target cell ratios. pIgA2 and S-IgA also inhibited NK activity of NK cell-enriched lymphoid cells and gamma-interferon-treated effector cells, but did not interfere with effector-target cell binding. The inhibitory effect was slightly diminished after 24 hr culture in pIgA2-free medium. Inhibition of cytotoxicity was not due to direct toxicity on lymphoid cells by IgA because PBL treated with pokeweed mitogen in the presence of pIgA2 or S-IgA differentiated into immunoglobulin-producing cells. Viability after 24 hr of preculture with pIgA2 and S-IgA was comparable to that of untreated control cells. Morphological examination of effector cells cultured with pIgA2 or S-IgA showed a decrease in the number of granules, and the formation of cytoplasmic vacuoles. These morphological changes appeared to coincide with the depressed cytotoxicity of NK cells. The results demonstrate that purified pIgA2 and S-IgA have significant immunomodulatory effects on human NK activity.  相似文献   

10.
We have previously reported that inoculating CD2F1 mice intraperitoneally with five doses of 2 x 10(7) inactivated Candida albicans (CA) cells was associated with the induction of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK)-like effectors. In this study we investigated the ability of some purified cell wall components of CA (CA-CW) to induce LAK-like cells in vivo. Multiple administrations of glucan ghost (GG), a mannoprotein mixture (MP) and a low-protein mannan fraction (M) at variance with whole CA did not induce LAK-like cells in the peritoneal cavity. However, the broad-spectrum antitumor cytotoxicity induced by CA could be recalled to a high level by a booster dose of MP and M, but not GG, given up to 70 days after the multiple CA-treatment. This induced cytotoxicity was maximum when the booster was given on Day +14 after CA-treatment and minimum on Day +70. In CA-treated mice, inoculated on Day +30 with CA or MP, LAK-like cytotoxicity was already significantly increased 4 hr after the booster, but the maximum value was reached at 24 hr. Anti-mannan antibodies did not interfere with LAK-like cells induction by CA because splenectomy before CA-treatment or passive administration of anti-mannan antibodies had no effect on the rapid activation of cytotoxicity by CA or a booster dose of MP. Administration of recombinant human interleukin-2 (rhIL-2) to CA-treated mice induced a higher level of NK activity than that induced by the same dose in untreated control mice, but did not activate LAK-like effectors. The results indicate that LAK-like effectors are easily generated in the peritoneal cavity by a booster with a defined antigenic constituent of CA cell wall for a long period in CA-sensitized mice.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The effect on natural killer (NK) cytotoxicity of splenic cells from BALB/c mice pretreated i. v. with squalane-in-water preparations of muramyl dipeptide (MDP), trehalose dimycolate (TDM), or the combination of MDP-plus-TDM was investigated. MDP or TDM augmented the NK cytotoxicity which peaked 48 h after the pretreatment whereas the combination of MDP and TDM induced an inhibition of the NK activity. Infection with influenza virus, a potent stimulator of NK cells, after the pretreatment with biological response modifiers resulted in a markedly enhanced NK activity on day 2 in MDP and control groups. Mice pretreated with TDM or the combination of MDP and TDM showed only moderate NK activity which peaked on day 3 after influenza infection. The NK activity was susceptible to asialo GM1 and complement treatment. The cytotoxicity of MDP-plus-TDM cells could be significantly enhanced after treatment with anti-macrophage monoclonal antibody and complement. NK activity induced by MDP or TDM was reduced by mixing MDP-plus-TDM cells. Addition of adherent cell-depleted MDP-plus-TDM suspension to MDP or TDM cells had a NK restorative effect. Splenic cells from mice pretreated 2 days earlier with MDP or TDM, but not MDP-plus-TDM, generated enhanced levels of luminol-dependent chemiluminescence.  相似文献   

12.
NK cells and certain CTL can recognize and lyse targets without restriction by the MHC. NK cells do not express CD3/TCR complexes and the membrane receptors participating in MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity are largely unknown. We demonstrate that YT2C2, a human NK leukemia cell line, expresses the CD28 differentiation Ag and can spontaneously lyse both murine and human cell lines expressing B7, a B cell- activation Ag that is a ligand for CD28. The participation of CD28/B7 interactions in MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity mediated by YT2C2 cells was demonstrated by correlation of target sensitivity with levels of B7 expression, inhibition of cytotoxicity by anti-CD28 or anti-B7 mAb, and by making both murine and human cell lines susceptible to YT2C2-mediated lysis by genetic transfection with expression vectors containing B7 cDNA. However, CD28/B7 interactions alone were insufficient to initiate cytotoxicity. mAb inhibition experiments and selection of CD54- (intercellular adhesion molecule-1) deficient B cell targets indicated that CD11a/18 (lymphocyte function-associated Ag-1) also cooperated in CD28/B7-dependent cytotoxicity. The requirement for both CD28/B7 and lymphocyte function-associated Ag-1/intercellular adhesion molecule-1 interactions in YT2C2-mediated MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity was confirmed by demonstrating that efficient lysis of murine L cells required cotransfection with both B7 and intercellular adhesion molecule-1. These findings support the concept that MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity may not be due to a unique receptor, but may result from interactions between an appropriate array of "adhesion" molecules with their ligands.  相似文献   

13.
To study cell-to-cell interactions in microgravity we examined the functional activity of natural killer cells on board of the ISS. NK cells are the effector cells with direct cytotoxic activity to oncogenic, virus-infected cells and cells with modified differentiation. Ground-based experiments have shown that the examination of target cell lysis after incubation with NK cells is a simple and informative model for studying the influence of microgravity. NK cytotoxicity was measured as the value of non-degradeted labeled myeloblasts (K-562) after 24 hrs exposure with human lymphocytes in suspension. A special device was developed for space flight experiments. Human cultured lymphocytes and labeled K-562 cells were loaded into special syringes and delivered to the Russian segment of the ISS. Cosmonauts prepared co-cultured suspensions during the first day of microgravity, exposed them at 37 degrees C for 24 hrs and then separated H3-labeled cells on special filters. The results of ISS-8 mission showed that human NK cells in vitro remain lysis activity toward target cells in microgravity. The basal level of NK cytotoxicity was low and we did not found significant differences between "control" and "flight" values. Interferon production during the interaction between immune and target cells (ratio 10:1) in microgravity did not differ compared with ground-based control experiments. Ground exposure of the same lymphocyte samples with K-562 cells to 24 hrs clinorotation also did not lead to significant differences. These experiments paved the way for understanding the cell interaction mechanisms in space flight and the obtained results suggest that microgravity does not disrupt the interaction of NK cells with tumor cells.  相似文献   

14.
The killer cell lectin-like receptor G1 (KLRG1) is the mouse homolog of the rat mast cell function-associated Ag and contains an immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif in its cytoplasmic domain. In this study we demonstrate that both pathogenic and nonpathogenic in vivo activation of NK cells induces the expression of KLRG1 on their cell surface. Upon infection with murine CMV, this induction peaks between days 5 and 7 with about 90% of the NK cells expressing KLRG1. On day 1.5 post-murine CMV infection of C57BL/6 mice, the main producers of IFN-gamma are the KLRG1-negative NK cells. This effect has been recapitulated in vitro as we show that engagement of KLRG1 on a transfected NK cell line inhibits both cytokine production and NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Taken together, these data illustrate the crucial role played by KLRG1 during the termination of mouse NK cell activation.  相似文献   

15.
The ability of adherent peritoneal cells (APC) to inhibit murine natural killer (NK) cell activity was examined. Nylon wool-nonadherent splenic effector cells were incubated overnight with or without different numbers of APC. NK activity was then measured against YAC-1 in a 4-hr 51Cr-release cytotoxicity assay. Proteose peptone-elicited or unstimulated resident APC from normal mice markedly suppressed NK activity of splenic effector cells in the presence or absence of exogenously added interferon. The suppression was dependent on the number of APC added with 10% APC, relative to the number of effector cells, resulting in a greater than 65% inhibition of cytotoxicity. The effector phase of cytotoxicity was not the target of the suppressor cells, because APC did not suppress NK activity when they were present only during the cytotoxicity assay. The addition of APC to alloimmune cytotoxic T cells under similar conditions resulted in no inhibition of cytotoxicity. Both syngeneic and allogeneic APC suppressed NK activity, but several murine macrophage-like cell lines lacked this property. In contrast to APC, incubation of effector cells with adherent spleen cells from normal mice resulted in no inhibition of NK activity. APC from mice injected with C. parvum were less inhibitory for NK activity than normal resident APC. In contrast, C. parvum APC suppressed concanavalin A-induced lymphoproliferation and were directly cytotoxic to tumor target cells in vitro, whereas normal APC lacked these properties. The results indicate that the peritoneum of untreated mice contains suppressor cells that can inhibit the in vitro maintenance and IFN-mediated augmentation of NK activity. In addition, these results indicate a broader spectrum of immune reactivities regulated by APC and suggest that, depending on their level of activation, APC can preferentially inhibit different immune functions.  相似文献   

16.
The coculture of rat bone marrow cells with recombinant interleukin-2 induced the generation of cells mediating natural killer (NK) activity and subsequent lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity depending upon the dose of IL-2 and time of culture. NK activity was detected as early as 4 to 5 days after the addition of IL-2 and could be evoked with as little as 5 to 50 U/ml. The induced NK cells had large granular lymphocyte (LGL) morphology and expressed 0X8 and asialo GM1 surface markers but did not express 0X19 or W3/25 markers. LAK activity was detected only after 5 days of culture, and required above 100 U/ml IL-2. Cells mediating LAK activity also expressed 0X8 and asialo GM1 but not 0X19. The generation of detectable NK and subsequent LAK activity was due to induction of early progenitor cells and not contaminating mature LGL/NK cells within the bone marrow population since of removal of such mature NK cells with L-leucine methyl ester (L-LME) did not affect the subsequent generation of either activity. Moreover, the removal of actively dividing cells as well as mature NK cells from the bone marrow by treatment with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in vivo enriched the remaining bone marrow population for both NK and LAK progenitor cells. The phenotype of the L-LME- and 5-FU-resistant NK and LAK progenitor cells within populations of bone marrow was determined by antibody plus complement depletion analysis. Although treatment of normal bone marrow with anti-asialo GM1 + C reduced the induction of NK and LAK activity in 5-day cultures, treatment of 5-FU marrow with anti-asialo GM1 + C did not affect either activity. Treatment with a pan-T cell antibody + C did not affect the development of NK or LAK activity under any conditions. Thus, the 5-FU-resistant NK/LAK progenitors were asialo GM1 negative but became asialo GM1+ after induction by IL-2. Finally, evidence that bone marrow-derived LAK cells were generated directly from the IL-2-induced NK cells was obtained by treating the IL-2-induced LGL/NK cells with L-LME.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The effect of a short synthetic fragment of human interleukin-1 beta (hu IL-1 beta) on natural killer (NK) activity was examined. Peripheral-blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from normal donors showed a significant increase in NK activity against K562 leukemia cells after preincubation for 18 h with the IL-1 peptide. A similar augmentation was not observed after culturing the cells in the presence of hu IL-1 beta. The increase in tumor cell lysis could not be ascribed to a cytolytic activity of the synthetic fragment on target cells, since the peptide caused no direct lysis of various tumor cell lines. Although the peptide enhanced NK cytotoxicity of PBMC, highly purified large granular lymphocytes were not susceptible to its stimulatory effect. The addition to the cultures of antibodies to human interleukin-2 (hu IL-2) completely blocked the peptide-induced boost of NK cytotoxicity, suggesting that IL-2 is mainly involved in the activation process. The ability of the IL-1 peptide to increase NK activity was further confirmed in vivo in the mouse. Cytotoxicity against YAC-1 lymphoma cells, which was very low in the spleen of untreated BALB/c mice, was in fact significantly increased after a single inoculation of the peptide. These data thus indicate that a short synthetic peptide fragment of hu IL-1 beta is able to increase both human and murine NK activity.  相似文献   

18.
A procedure using preparative free-flow high voltage electrophoresis is described for the fractionation of murine spleen and bone marrow cells so as to obtain cell subpopulations that are either enriched in or depleted of "natural killer" (NK) cells and "mitogen-induced cellular cytotoxicity" (MICC) effector cells. A nearly three fold enrichment in the NK and MICC activities of spleen cells was achieved. The enrichment in these cells could be further increased if the phagocytic cells were removed prior to electrophoresis. When bone marrow cells were fractionated a two and a half fold increase of NK activity, and a one and a half fold enrichment of MICC activity was achieved. In both cases, other fractions were nearly devoid of NK and MICC activity. The cell recovery after electrophoresis averages 70% of the cells applied, and at least 90% of these cells were viable. MICC and NK effector cells could not be separated to a useful extent electrophoretically but were found to be separable using Sephadex C-10 gel filtration columns. The MICC but not the NK cells were retained on these columns.  相似文献   

19.
《Cellular immunology》1986,100(1):79-88
Natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity (NCMC) against a number of target cells is mediated by at least two distinct effector populations, with natural killer (NK) and natural cytotoxic (NC) cells being the predominant in the murine system. The studies described in this report examine the role that the phase of the mitotic cycle of the target cell has on its susceptibility to lysis by NC and NK cells. We show that neither the kinectics nor the magnitude of NC cell lysis is altered when assayed using target cells which have been enriched for G1, S, or G2 + M stages of the cell cycle. Similarly, NK cell lysis by fresh or poly-IC augmented effector cells was not effected by target Cell Cycle.  相似文献   

20.
Natural killer (NK) cells are important effectors in resistance to viral infections. The role of NK cells in the acute response to human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) infected cells was investigated in a mouse model based on a HIV-1/murine leukemia virus (MuLV) pseudovirus. Splenocytes infected with HIV-1/MuLV were injected intraperitoneally and local immunologic responses and persistence of infected cells were investigated. In vivo depletion with an anti-NK1.1 antibody showed that NK cells are important in resistance to virus infected cells. Moreover, NK cell frequency in the peritoneal cavity increased in response to infected cells and these NK cells had a more mature phenotype, as determined by CD27 and Mac-1 expression. Interestingly, after injection of HIV-1/MuLV infected cells, but not MuLV infected cells, peritoneal NK cells had an increased cytotoxic activity. In conclusion, NK cells play a role in the early control of HIV-1/MuLV infected cells in vivo.  相似文献   

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