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1.
Phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-induced colony formation in semisolid agar medium by human peripheral blood T lymphocytes showed an increasing cloning efficiency with decreasing numbers of cultured cells. Ninety percent of CD4+ cells (inducer/helper phenotype) and 20% of CD8+ cells (cytotoxic/suppressor phenotype) formed colonies when cultured at 10-200 cells/ml culture in the presence of sheep red blood cells (SRBC) and a source of interleukin-2 (IL-2). Probably all T-colony-forming cells, but none of the subsequent colony cells, expressed the Leu-8 antigen. The cloning efficiencies of FACS-sorted cells expressing the natural killer antigenic phenotypes Leu-7+ and CD16+ were found to be less than 1%. The costimulatory effect of red blood cells for colony formation was specific for SRBC and not observed in the presence of red cells obtained from seven other species including man. All T-lymphocyte colonies obtained from unseparated peripheral blood mononuclear cells expressed the CD25 antigen (IL-2 receptor) and colonies were always composed of either CD4+ or CD8+ cells. None of the colony cells expressed the Leu-8 or the CD16 antigens. By their specific morphology in agar culture the majority of colonies composed of CD4+ cells were easily recognized, but but approximately one-third of the CD4+ colonies could not be distinguished from colonies composed of CD8+ cells. On expansion of individual colonies in liquid subculture in the presence of interleukin-2, approximately 15% of the colonies developed natural killer (NK)-like cytotoxic activity, being capable of direct killing of K562 tumor cells. It is concluded that the present method for growing human T colonies exhibits the same cloning efficiency as the most efficient liquid culture systems. Individual T colonies are composed exclusively of T inducer/helper or T cytotoxic/suppressor cells, they are never of mixed phenotype, and they do not contain cells of natural killer phenotype. Regulatory mechanisms influencing colony formation are operating between and within the various subsets of T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

2.
A bacterium was isolated from the pus of a patient with pelvic actinomycosis. The cells were strictly anaerobic, straight, non-sporulating, Gram-positive rods. It grows on sheep blood agar as non-haemolytic, pinpoint colonies after 24 hours of incubation at 37 degrees C in anaerobic environment. It is non-motile and does not produce catalase. 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequencing showed that there were 6.6% difference between the 16S rRNA gene sequence of the bacterium that of Actinomyces marimammalium (GenBank Accession no. AJ276405), a new species described in 2001, isolated from two seals and a porpoise. For these reasons a new species, Actinomyces hongkongensis sp. nov., is proposed, for which HKU8(T) is the type strain. Further studies should be performed to ascertain the potential of this bacterium to become an important cause of actinomycosis.  相似文献   

3.
Colonies of human lymphocytes with T cell characteristics will grow in agar from repeated mitotic divisions with phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) stimulation. The colonies comprise spheres of tightly-packed cells with up to 500-1,000 blast-like cells in each colony. 65% of cells from pooled colonies bound AET-treated sheep red cells. 1,100-2,500 colonies/10(6) peripheral blood lymphocytes developed when cell donors were healthy but lower numbers (350-1,000 colonies/10(6) lymphocytes) were detected in blood from cancer patients. Comparison with other non-specific assays of cell-mediated immunity showed that while 66% of cancer patients were anergic (to five recall antigens) and 78% exhibited depressed mitotic activity in standard cultures with low dose PHA, 100% of these patients revealed T cell colony formation below normal. It is suggested that further studies of T lymphocyte colony-forming cells in healthy people and in a number of disease states may significantly advance our understanding of mechanisms of cell-mediated immunity.  相似文献   

4.
K E Stein  D M Marcus 《Biochemistry》1977,16(24):5285-5291
Biochemical analysis of the glycosphingolipids (GSLs) of human lymphocytes revealed qualitative and quantitative variations among purified lymphocytes from different tissues. The major neutral GSLs of tonsil lymphocytes are glucosyl ceramide (CMH), lactosyl ceramide (CDH), trihexosyl ceramide (CTH), and globoside. Thymocytes and peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) contain only traces of CTH and globoside, and PBL contain more CMH and CDH per cell than tonsil lymphocytes. Thymocytes and PBL contain relatively large amounts of more complex neutral GSLs that are present in only trace amounts in tonsil lymphocytes. Peripheral blood lymphocytes contained three and five times more lipid-bound sialic acid than thymocytes and toncil lymphocytes, respectively. Thymocytes and PBL contained mostly hematoside, whereas tonsil lymphocytes contained more complex gangliosides in addition to hematoside. The observed differences in GSL content among these cells may be related to their content of B cells, which comprise approximately 50% of tonsil lymphocytes, 10% of PBL and 0-2% of thymus cells, and/or the known differences in functional capacities of cells in different lymphoid organs. These findings suggest that cell surface GSLs may serve as markers for identification of functional subpopulations of human lymphocytes.  相似文献   

5.
Fusion of unfractionated human lymphocytes with mouse myeloma cells resulted in proliferating hybrid colonies, almost all producting human Ig. We examined whether this high frequency of Ig production was the result of selective formation of human B lymphocyte-mouse myeloma hybrids, rather than induction of Ig genes in T lymphocytes. Unfractionated peripheral lymphocytes and B lymphocytes from patients with the common variable form of agammaglobulinemia formed proliferating somatic cell hybrid colonies. In contrast, peripheral lymphocytes from a patient with agammaglobulinema who lacked B lymphocytes, as well as albumin gradient fractions of peripheral blood which do not contain B lymphocytes, failed to produce somatic cell hybrids with three different myeloma parent cell lines. B, T, and precursor lymphocytes all had Sendai virus receptors, as witnessed by viral agglutination. We conclude that fusion of human lymphocytes with mouse myeloma cells results in selective hybrid formation, rather than activation of Ig genes in disparate cell types. Only B lymphocyte-mouse myeloma heterokaryons form hybrid cells.  相似文献   

6.
Human lymphocytes, isolated from peripheral blood and stimulated with phytohemagglutinin M (PHA) prior to being seeded on a two-layer medium of soft agar which contained the mitogen, developed into colonies 3–4 days after seeding in the culture system. The cloning potential of PHA-treated lymphocytes is significantly enhanced by adding, to the soft agar culture, culture fluid (CF) obtained from mitogen-treated lymphocytes or a feeder layer (FL) prepared either from lymphocytes isolated from peripheral blood or from T-cell enriched populations. PHA seems to stimulate the release of lymphocyte colony enhancing factor (LCEF) from the T-sensitized lymphocytes. The addition of CF or FL to the culture medium appears to increase the amount of LCEF, resulting in enhancement of the number and size of lymphocyte colonies. When CF derived from spleen cells or from the peripheral blood adherent-cell population was added to the lower layer of the soft agar culture, the growth and development of lymphocyte colonies was inhibited. This suggests that monocyte-macrophages release a lymphocyte colony inhibiting factor (LCIF) into the CF. The extent of inhibition or stimulation of colony formation is a function of the number and type of cells used to prepare the CF or FL and the concentration of CF in the culture medium. The presence of FL or CF derived from spleen non-adherent cells, white blood cells, bone marrow cells, or a B-cell enriched population had no effect on colonies growing in the culture. This may possibly be due to the paucity of T lymphocytes and monocyte-macrophages present in these materials. A control system in which LCIF, produced by monocyte-macrophages, and LCEF, produced by T lymphocytes, participate in the regulation of lymphocyte production is postulated.  相似文献   

7.
Investigations on the morphology of cells that participate in immune responses in vitro have been limited because the recovery and identification of immunocompetent cells growing dispersely in conventional liquid cultures are technically difficult and allow only the observation of individual antibody-forming cells. Here we used a system in which focal proliferation of antisheep erythrocyte antibody-secreting cells has been induced in semisolid cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. By this method, intact colonies can be observed by light microscopy at the center of each hemolytic area and then processed for electron microscopy without disrupting the connections existing among the cells. Two types of colonies develop: type I colonies which grow deeply into the agar and contain cells that undergo a complete process of differentiation from blast to mature plasma cell, and type II colonies which grow more superficially and do not seem to be directly involved in antibody production.  相似文献   

8.
The growth and morphology of submerged bacterial colonies was investigated. Five separate colonial forms were recognized depending both on species and on agar concentration. These were (i) branched, dendritic structures seen only with Bacillus cereus ; (ii) lenticular colonies for all other species at high agar concentrations; (iii) small lobed to spherical colonies for non-motile organisms at low agar concentrations; (iv) and (v) large diffuse spherical colonies which can be further subdivided into 'snowball' or 'wispy' types for motile bacteria growing at agar concentrations below about 0·65% w/v. Viable count determinations suggested that agar concentration had little effect in the early stages of growth but that motile cells at low agar concentrations achieved higher cell numbers than did those in concentrations greater than 0·65% w/v. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that bacteria in lenticular colonies were tightly packed within lens-shaped splits in the agar whilst at low agar concentrations motile cells were well separated and appeared to move through the agar matrix.  相似文献   

9.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was analyzed in order to determine which component, lipid A or polysaccharide (PS), is able to stimulate B lymphocytes from ICR lymph nodes and spleen cells from nude (nu/nu) mice into forming colonies in soft agar culture. Lipid A, obtained by acid hydrolysis of LPS and solubilized by complex-formation with bovine serum albumin, was found to be the active moiety of LPS capable of stimulating colony growth of lymphoid cells in soft agar culture. The PS portion exhibited no significant activity at the concentrations used. Glycolipids from mutant strains of S. minnesota which contain the intact lipid moiety but are deficient in PS content, were as potent as S. abortus equi LPS in stimulating B cells into colony growth. Alkaline hydrolysis of LPS which cleaves ester-linked fatty acids, substantially decreased the number of lymphocyte colonies formed. This indicates that the intact lipid moiety is required for stimulating lymphocytes into colony formation. The synthetic glycolipid, N-palmitoyl-D-glucosamine (NPG), whose structure is similar to some components of lipid A, was also able to induce B lymphocyte colony development. In summary, our data point to lipid A as the active moiety of the endotoxin which induces B lymphocytes to grow and develop into colonies in the 2-layer soft agar culture system.  相似文献   

10.
Colony formation in agar by multipotential hemopoietic cells.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Agar cultures of CBA fetal liver, peripheral blood, yolk sac and adult marrow cells were stimulated by pokeweed mitogen-stimulated spleen conditioned medium. Two to ten percent of the colonies developing were mixed colonies, documented by light or electron microscopy to contain erythroid, neutrophil, macrophage, eosinophil and megakaryocytic cells. No lymphoid cells were detected. Mean size for 7-day mixed colonies was 1,800-7,300 cells. When 7-day mixed colonies were recloned in agar, low levels of colony-forming cells were detected in 10% of the colonies but most daughter colonies formed were small neutrophil and/or macrophage colonies. Injection of pooled 7-day mixed colony cells to irradiated CBA mice produced low numbers of spleen colonies, mainly erythroid in composition. Karyotypic analysis using the T6T6 marker chromosome showed that some of these colonies were of donor origin. With an assumed f factor of 0.2, the mean content of spleen colony-forming cells per 7-day mixed colony was calculated to vary from 0.09 to 0.76 according to the type of mixed colony assayed. The fetal and adult multipotential hemopoietic cells forming mixed colonies in agar may be hemopoietic stem cells perhaps of a special or fetal type.  相似文献   

11.
Culture in agar of cloned promonocytic leukemia cell lines derived from Abelson virus-infected mice produced colonies of both a compact and diffuse morphology. Diffuse colonies contained fewer cells capable of forming colonies when recultured in agar than did compact colonies. Serial subcloning of cells from diffuse, but not compact, colonies ultimately led to the complete loss of colony-forming cells, i.e., to clonal extinction. The production of both compact and diffuse agar colonies was independent of the cell density of either the static liquid culture from which cells were taken for culture in agar, or the number of cells per agar culture. Furthermore, bioassays of culture supernatants indicated the leukemia cells did not secrete hemopoietic growth factors active on normal hemopoietic cells, transforming growth factors active on adherent cell lines, or factors that influenced the growth of the leukemic cells themselves. Collectively, these data suggest neither growth-factor independent replication nor the spontaneous differentiation of Abelson virus-infected myeloid cells involves autocrine secretion of growth regulators.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of anti-immunoglobulin M (IgM) and anti-IgD on the ability of fluorescein (FL)-specific B cells to proliferate in a colony-forming assay, and of their progeny to further differentiate in response to different FL-antigens was studied. Splenic FL-specific B cells were purified on FL-gelatin plates and were then cultured in semisolid agar in the presence or absence of anti-mu, and anti-delta, or both. Experiments were performed under conditions of either sheep red blood cell (SRBC)-potentiated or SRBC + lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-potentiated colony growth. The resulting colonies were then tested in secondary filler cell-dependent microcultures for the ability to be triggered by different classes of FL-antigens to yield plaque-forming cells (PFC). Anti-delta inhibited 47% of colony growth under both agar culture conditions. Anti-mu inhibited 55% of colony growth in SRBC + LPS-potentiated agar cultures, and inhibited 72% if only SRBC was present. If anti-delta and anti-mu were added together, inhibition was nearly additive. When anti-Ig-treated colonies were tested for PFC responses against FL-polymerized flagellin (POL), both normal and anti-delta resistant colonies, grown under both agar culture conditions, responded well. Anti-mu resistant colonies were refractory to FL-POL challenge. Only normal or anti-delta resistant colonies grown in SRBC + LPS agar cultures were able to respond well to FL-Ficoll, whereas even normal SRBC-potentiated colonies responded poorly. All except SRBC-potentiated, anti-mu treated colonies were able to respond to nonspecific signals present in cultures containing FL-KLH and activated T cell help. These data suggest that addition of specific anti-Ig antibodies, and variation of agar culture conditions, can select for B cell subpopulations responsive only to certain types of antigens.  相似文献   

13.
Haemolysin patterns of 175 strains of different Salmonella enterica subspecies enterica serovars isolated from different animal sources and places were determined using 11 different blood agar media made with either non-washed horse/sheep erythrocytes or with washed erythrocytes of cattle, sheep, horse, goat, rabbit, guinea pig, and human A, O and B blood groups. Study on 47 strains belonging to 10 serovars of Salmonella from buffalo meat (buffen), 42 strains of 11 serovars from goat meat (chevon): 16 strains of Salmonella enterica serovar Paratyphi B and 25 of S. enterica serovar Paratyphi B var Java from fish, meat, meat products and clinical cases; 45 isolates of S. Abortusequi from aborted mares (18), fetal contents (21), aborted donkey mares (2) and 4 reference strains, revealed that all host restricted Salmonella namely, S. enterica serovar Gallinarum, S. enterica serovar Anatum, S. enterica serovar Abortusequi and S. enterica serovar Paratyphi B could be divided into different haemolysin types based on their inability to produce haemolysis on one or more types of blood agar, while strains of all zoonotic Salmonella serovars induced haemolysis on all the 9 types of blood agar made of washed erythrocytes. None of 175 Salmonella could produce hemolytic colonies on blood agar made of non-washed horse/ sheep erythrocytes. Haemolysin type I (lysing all types of washed erythrocytes) was the commonest one among all serovars except S. Abortusequi, none of which lysed horse erythrocytes. Salmonella enterica serovar Abortusequi having hemolytic activity against sheep erythrocytes were more invasive but had lesser ability to survive in sheep mononuclear cells than non-hemolytic strains. Multiplicity of haemolysins appeared significant epidemiological tool.  相似文献   

14.
We examined expression of the normal cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and in transfected neuroblastoma cells with a panel of six monoclonal antibodies (Mabs). While all six of the Mabs reacted strongly with the neuroblastoma cells, only four of the Mabs reacted with PrP(C) expressed by human PBMC. PrP(C) is expressed at high levels in human T cells, B cells, monocytes, and dendritic cells, but not in red blood cells. Immunoblotting studies revealed that the PrP(C) glycoforms and the composition of the N-linked glycans on PrP(C) in human PBMC are different from those of the brain or the neuroblastoma cells. In human PBMC and the neuroblastoma cell lines the N-terminal portion of the PrP(C) is hypersensitive to proteolytic digestion, suggesting that the N-terminus of the PrP(C) on the surface of a living cell lacks secondary structure. We found that the level of PrP(C) expressed on the surface of human T lymphocytes was up-regulated as a consequence of cellular activation. Accordingly, memory T cells express more PrP(C) than na?ve T cells. In addition, the proliferation of human T lymphocytes stimulated with an anti-CD3 Mab was inhibited by anti-PrP(C) Mabs. Collectively, these results suggest that PrP(C) can participate in signal transduction in human T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

15.
This report describes a method of growing soft agar colonies of human T lymphocytes activated in the MLR. Two types of colonies were demonstrated: lower colonies grew within the agar layer, and upper colonies grew on the surface of the agar layer. Three days of priming the lymphocytes in the MLR and the use of supernatants of day-3 MLR cultures to provide T cell colony growth factor were necessary for optimal colony formation. Lymphocytes obtained from colonies were grown in long-term (2 to 4 weeks) cultures to generate sufficient numbers of cells to be tested in different functional assays. Cells from both types of colonies exhibited PLT activity. Upper colony cells showed considerably higher CML activity than lower colony cells (mean percent cytotoxicity 37 +/- 5 vs 6 +/- 3). Cells from both types of colonies contained radiosensitive suppressor cell activity that inhibited the primary MLR. The suppressor cell effect of lower colony cells was specific for the original stimulator, but upper colony cells displayed nonspecific suppressive effects. For both types of colony cells, it appeared that suppressive effects were unrelated to the CML activity of these cells. These data suggest that the soft agar colony assay offers a promising approach to separate subpopulations of lymphocytes activated in the MLR.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of agar sterilized by either boiling or autoclaving on human melanoma colony formation in soft agar was compared using cells from 17 biopsies of metastatic malignant melanoma. The frequency of colony formation was significantly increased for cells grown in boiled agar in 8 samples (47%), unchanged in 8 samples (47%), and decreased in only one sample (6%). There were increases in both cluster and colony formation for the melanomas which had augmented colony formation when grown in boiled agar. There was also qualitative morphological improvement, including rounder, smoother cells and less extracellular debris surrounding the colonies. These data suggest that melanoma colony formation is enhanced when cells are grown in agar which has been sterilized by boiling rather than autoclaving.  相似文献   

17.
Two primary cell targets for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection in vivo are CD4+ T lymphocytes and monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM). HIV-1 encodes envelope glycoproteins which mediate virus entry into these cells. We have utilized infected and radiolabelled primary peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) and MDM cultures to examine the biochemical and antigenic properties of the HIV-1 envelope produced in these two cell types. The gp120 produced in MDM migrates as a broad, diffuse band in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gels compared with that of the more homogeneous gp120 released from PBMCs. Glycosidase analyses indicated that the diffuse appearance of the MDM gp120 is due to the presence of asparagine-linked carbohydrates containing lactosaminoglycans, a modification not observed with the gp120 produced in PBMCs. Neutralization experiments, using isogeneic PBMC and MDM-derived macrophage-tropic HIV-1 isolates, indicate that 8- to 10-fold more neutralizing antibody, directed against the viral envelope, is required to block virus produced from MDM. These results demonstrate that HIV-1 released from infected PBMC and MDM cultures differs in its biochemical and antigenic properties.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Both phytohemagglutinin-induced cytotoxicity and recombinant-interleukin-2 (rIL-2)-induced lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity against noncultured melanoma cells were significantly reduced when peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from patients with metastatic melanoma were incubated in RPMI medium 1640 and 10% autologous human serum instead of 10% fetal calf serum, while serum from either healthy donors or patients with primary melanoma did not affect the level of cytotoxicity. The serum-mediated suppression was not restricted by major histocompatibility complex and was time-dependent. Addition of 10% human serum from the patients with metastatic melanoma [HS-Pt(m)] to the culture of PBMC with rIL-2 at the same time or 1 day after incubation significantly inhibited LAK activity. However, addition of 10% HS-Pt(m) 2 or 3 days after incubation did not inhibit LAK activity. Incubation of PBMC for 2 h with a high dose (104 U/ml) of rIL-2 in the presence of 10% HS-Pt(m), followed by incubation in the absence of either rIL-2 or HS-Pt(m), did not affect LAK cell activity. These results suggest that HS-Pt(m) inhibits the early stage of LAK cell differentiation, rather than the binding of rIL-2 to PBMC or a later stage in the differentiation. In contrast to PBMC, monocyte-depleted peripheral blood lymphocytes exhibited comparable levels of LAK activity when cultured with rIL-2 either in 10% fetal calf serum, 10% human serum from healthy donors or 10% HS-Pt(m). Addition of purified autologous monocytes to the culture of monocyte-depleted peripheral blood lymphocytes with rIL-2 suppressed LAK cell induction when 10% HS-Pt(m) was present. Thus serum-mediated suppression of LAK cell induction is largely dependent on the presence of monocytes, which may produce a secondary inhibitor that acts on lymphocytes. Addition of indomethacin to the culture did not reverse this monocyte-dependent serum-mediated suppression in a majority of cases, suggesting that prostaglandin E2 does not have a major role in the suppression.This work was supported in part by NIH grant RR5511-25 and grants from The Council for Tobacco Research USA Inc., The Meadows Foundation, the Erwin Zaban Melanoma Research Foundation, and the Gillson-Longenbaugh Foundation  相似文献   

19.
In order to characterize the biological properties of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) variants from different tissues (peripheral blood mononuclear cells [PBMC], lymph node, spleen, brain, and lung) of one patient, we have chosen long-range PCR to amplify virtually full-length HIV proviruses and to construct replication-competent viruses by adding a patient-specific 5' long terminal repeat. To avoid selection during propagation in CD4+ target cells, we transfected 293 cells and used the supernatants from these cells as challenge viruses for tropism studies after titration on human PBMC. Despite differences in the V3 loop of the major variants found in brain and lung compared to lymphoid tissues all recombinant HIV clones obtained showed identical cell tropism and replicative kinetics. After infection of human PBMC these viruses replicated with similar kinetics, with a slow/low-titer, non-syncytium-inducing phenotype. In contrast to the prediction of macrophage tropism, drawn from the V3 loop sequence, none of these viruses infected monocyte-derived macrophages. The challenge of blood dendritic cells by these recombinant viruses in the presence of tumor necrosis factor alpha, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, and interleukin-4 resulted in a productive infection only after adding stimulated CD4+ T lymphocytes. Therefore, the biological properties of the HIV-1 variants derived from nonlymphoid tissue of this patient did not differ from those of HIV-1 variants from lymphoid tissue with respect to tropism for primary cells such as PBMC, macrophages, and blood dendritic cells.  相似文献   

20.
Normal human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and leukaemic cell lines (three of human and one of gibbon origin) were found to contain similar levels of calmodulin (CaM) when expressed relative to the total cell protein. Two of the cell lines examined further were found to contain much higher amounts of CaM per cell (up to 5-fold) than PBMC but this was readily explained by their much greater cell size. Variations in CaM levels were noted during culture of both PBMC and leukaemic cells which were apparently independent of the percentage of cells undergoing active division in these cultures. These results do not support, the contention that transformed cells contain a higher proportion of CaM than normal cells.  相似文献   

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