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1.
We have identified and partially purified a novel cytolytic factor isolated from enriched plasma membranes prepared from highly purified lymphokine-activated killer cells (adherent-LAK. A-LAK cells) and a large granular lymphocytic NK cell leukemia, CRNK-16. The enriched plasma membranes were shown to be physically devoid of lytic granules and contained no detectable pore-forming protein (PFP, perforin) activity. The plasma membrane-associated cytolytic factor (designated M-CTX) was solubilized in biologically active form and was highly lytic to a large panel of target cells in 2- to 4-hr 51Cr release assays. Characteristics of the M-CTX include: (1) it is plasma membrane- not granule-associated: (2) it is not hemolytic and functions in the absence of Ca2+: (3) nucleated target cells are lysed in 2 to 4 hr at 37 degrees C but not at 4 degrees C: (4) it induces apoptotic cell death with nuclear DNA fragmentation and massive membrane blebbing: (5) it is isolated from the plasma membranes of cultured A-LAK cells, a lytically active LGL leukemia (CRNK-16), and fresh spleen cells but not from thymocytes or L929 fibroblasts: and (6) the lytic activity of the partially purified toxin is inactivated by trypsin, serum, and heat, but is not blocked by antibodies that inactivate TNF-alpha, LT or IFN-gamma. Taken collectively, these data suggest that M-CTX may represent a heretofore undescribed membrane-associated toxin possibly involved in contact-mediated cell killing. 相似文献
2.
Short-term culture of murine lymphocytes in interleukin 2 (IL-2), in the absence of any priming antigen, has been shown to result in the differentiation of an activated killer cell population capable of potent cytotoxic activity against tumor cells. The progenitor and lineage of these lymphokine activated killer cells (LAK) remains controversial. The present study was initiated to combine both complement-mediated depletion and flow cytometry to examine the cell surface membrane markers on murine LAK precursors and effectors. Selective depletion of antigen-positive cells from the precursor or effector population followed by functional assays demonstrates that the LAK effector is derived from a non-thymus-processed cell (Thy-1 negative). Paradoxically, the effector acquires Thy-1 expression in parallel to the IL-2 induced acquisition of killer cell effector function. These studies clearly show that both precursor and effector cells express the "NK-associated" Qa 5 and asialo GM-1 surface antigens. Mature effectors, but not the precursors, exhibit both Lyt-2 and the "NK-associated" NK-1.1 cell surface marker. Our flow cytometric analyses of murine spleen cells activated in rIL-2 have identified a distinct large, granular cell population which contains the LAK effector. This population, which can be readily discerned using light scattering properties with a flow cytometer, demonstrates both quantitative and qualitative changes in cell surface antigen expression. 相似文献
3.
The effects of adherent cell depletion, indomethacin, and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) on murine LAK cell activity were investigated. Removal of plastic adherent cells from splenocyte suspensions either prior to 5-day culture with 1000 U/ml of recombinant human IL-2 (rIL-2) or prior to assay resulted in an enhanced LAK cell cytotoxicity compared to that of whole spleen cell suspensions. Indomethacin enhanced LAK cell cytotoxicity of whole splenocyte suspensions if present during the culture period, but had no effect on whole splenocyte or adherent cell-depleted cell suspensions if added just prior to assay. PGE2 suppressed LAK cell activity of nonadherent splenocyte but not whole splenocyte suspensions when present during the culture period. In vivo treatment of mice with indomethacin enhanced cytotoxicity directed toward both LAK sensitive, natural killer (NK) resistant (P-815) and LAK, NK sensitive (YAC-1) tumor cell targets. Splenocytes from indomethacin-treated mice cultured with additional indomethacin and rIL-2 exhibited highest LAK cell activity. The results from this study indicate that LAK cells are regulated by adherent cells which suppress LAK cell activity. This suppression can be reversed both in vitro and in vivo by indomethacin. This study has important implications for the possible clinical use of indomethacin in the potentiation of in vivo and in vitro LAK cell activity for immunotherapeutic protocols. 相似文献
4.
It is possible to generate high levels of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity in short-term culture from cells enriched for natural killer (NK) activity. To determine whether LAK activity can also be generated from non-NK cells, we have depleted peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) of NK cells prior to culture with IL-2. NK activity in PBL is correlated with the intensity of staining with the lysosomotropic vital dye quinacrine. Quinacrine dim PBL, which are devoid of lytic NK cells, are capable of developing LAK activity following culture with IL-2. We have also separated PBL using the NK-associated NKH-1 marker. Depleting NKH-1+ cells eliminates NK activity but the ability to develop LAK activity is retained. NKH-1-depleted cells generate less LAK activity than unseparated or NKH-1-positive cells and do not proliferate as well as unseparated cells to IL-2. When NK-depleted cells are subsequently examined for the expression of the NKH-1 antigen, this marker is absent from most cells at Day 3 of IL-1 culture, but is expressed on an increasing number of cells by Days 6-8. These results suggest that LAK derived from non-NK cells is functionally and phenotypically similar to LAK from PBL-containing NK cells, and may be the result of the activation of an NK precursor population. 相似文献
5.
P. Basse R. B. Herberman M. Hokland R. H. Goldfarb 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》1992,34(4):221-227
Summary Assessment of the tissue distribution of adoptively transferred adherent lymphokine-activated killer A-LAK) cells by use of51Cr indicated that these effector cells, after an initial phase in the lungs, distributed in high numbers to liver and spleen (30% and 10% of injected dose, respectively). However, when this experiment was repeated with125IdUrd as cell label, fewer than 2% and 0.5% of the injected cells distributed into liver and spleen respectively. To analyse this discrepancy, we compared the tissue distribution of51Cr- and125IdUrd-labelled A-LAK cells with that indicated by alternative direct visual methods for identification of the injected cells, such as fluorescent dyes (rhodamine and H33342) or immunohistochemical staining of asialo-GM1-positive cells. The number of i. v. injected A-LAK cells found in the liver by all visual methods ranged from 1% to 5% of the injected dose, supporting the data obtained with125IdUrd, whereas 25%–30% of the51Cr label was consistently found in this organ. Autoradiography of the liver 24 h after i. v. injection of51Cr-labelled cells revealed a background activity that was four- to fivefold higher than the control level, indicating substantial non-specific accumulation in the liver of51Cr released from A-LAK cells. We conclude that51Cr cannot be reliably used in investigations of cell traffic to the liver because of non-specific accumulation of the51Cr label, particularly in this organ. In contrast, labelling with125IdUrd or rhodamine and immunohistochemical staining of asialo-GM1-positive cells appear to be reliable and essentially equivalent methods for investigations of the fate of adoptively transferred A-LAK cells. Using these methods, we found that only few A-LAK cells redistribute to the liver upon i. v., i. e. systemic, injection, whereas 40%–50% of locally (intraportally) injected A-LAK cells remain in the liver for at least 24 h. 相似文献
6.
Mouse NKR-P1. A family of genes selectively coexpressed in adherent lymphokine-activated killer cells 总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10
NK cells are a subpopulation of large granular lymphocytes. They are able to recognize and lyse a wide variety of virally infected or neoplastic target cells without previous sensitization or MHC restriction. The molecules involved in target recognition and subsequent triggering of the killing process are still undefined. Recently, a 30-kDa protein highly expressed on rat NK cells and capable of mediating transmembrane signaling was identified and the gene coding for it cloned and sequenced. To better understand the role of this protein in NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity, we cloned its mouse homologue by cross-hybridization of the rat gene to a cDNA library generated from highly purified mouse lymphokine-activated NK cells. Three messages, differing in size and sequence and encoded by different genes, are specifically cotranscribed in mouse NK cells. The protein products of this gene family express the lectin-like motif characteristic of type II transmembrane molecules. Both the rat and mouse proteins have conserved tyrosine and serine residues in their cytoplasmatic portion that are potential phosphorylation sites. They also share a sequence that could be the binding site of the P56lck tyrosine kinase. These observations are consistent with the signaling function hypothesized for these proteins. 相似文献
7.
Generation of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells from tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Culture of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) containing about 20% BMC2 tumor cells with recombinant human interleukin 2 (rIL-2) resulted in the diminish of tumor cells and the growth of lymphocytes. These IL-2-activated lymphocytes showed a strong cytotoxic activity against not only syngeneic tumor cells but also allogeneic tumor cells. Such broad-reactive killer cells, termed lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells, are also inducible from spleen cells by in vitro activation with IL-2. However, LAK cells generated from TIL (TIL-LAK) showed higher cytotoxic activity against BMC2 than LAK cells generated from spleen cells (S-LAK). Furthermore, it was demonstrated that TIL-LAK cells revealed marginal cytotoxic activity against normal Con A blasts and YAC-1 cells as opposed to S-LAK. Flow cytometric analysis of TIL-LAK indicated that TIL-LAK cells mainly consisted of Thy 1.2+, Ly 2+, asialo GM1+ cells. TIL-LAK cells displayed not only in vitro cytotoxicity but also in vivo anti-tumor activity. Furthermore, it was also confirmed that TIL-LAK cells could be induced in autochthonous mouse tumor systems and human gastric tumor systems. 相似文献
8.
R L Geller M J Smyth S L Strobl F H Bach F W Ruscetti D L Longo A C Ochoa 《Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)》1991,146(10):3280-3288
CD4+ and CD8+ T cells do not develop significant lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity when PBL are cultured with IL-2 or even when they are activated with a T cell stimulus such as OKT3 mAb. The possibility that a T cell regulatory mechanism prevents the development of LAK activity by CD4+ or CD8+ cells in OKT3 mAb and IL-2 cultures was tested by depleting CD8+ or CD4+ cells from PBL before stimulation with OKT3 and IL-2. Under these conditions, the remaining CD4+ and CD8+ cells were able to generate non-MHC-restricted lysis of NK-resistant tumor targets. Our data suggested that a regulatory signal was present in the culture to prevent the development of lytic function by T cells. T cells removed from the PBL cultures were, upon culture with IL-2, able to generate high LAK activity, suggesting that inhibition of the CD4+ or CD8+ T cell-mediated LAK activity was an active ongoing process, which blocked the lysis at the level of the activated cell and not the precursor cell. Mixing experiments demonstrated that the CD4+ or the CD8+ cells isolated from the PBL cultures were able to inhibit the development of lytic function in the CD4-depleted and CD8-depleted cultures. Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) has been shown to block LAK activity of NK cells in IL-2-stimulated cultures. When TGF-beta was added to CD4(+)- or CD8(+)-depleted cultures, it also inhibited LAK activity of T cells in a dose-dependent fashion, without interfering with T cell growth. Lytic activity returned to activated levels when TGF-beta was removed from the culture medium, thereby demonstrating the reversibility of TGF-beta inhibition. 相似文献
9.
T Yano M Murata T Ishida T Mitsudomi G Kimura K Sugimachi K Nomoto 《Cellular immunology》1989,122(2):578-584
We previously reported that lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity can be generated in human lymph node lymphocytes (LNL) at the same level as that in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL), despite the absence of active natural killer (NK) cells. In the present study, we investigated the surface phenotype of LNL-LAK cells by fractionation of lymphocytes, using a panning method. LNL isolated from lung cancer patients were cultured in the presence of recombinant interleukin 2 for 8 days and separated into T cells and non-T cells according to the expression of CD3 antigen. LAK effectors were enriched in the CD3- non-T cells. However, the CD3+ cells also mediated a low but substantial level of LAK activity, which was attributed to a CD8+ T-cell subset. Further investigation of the CD3- cells revealed that most of the CD3- effector cells expressed neither B-cell (CD20) nor NK-cell (CD16) markers. Precursors of this CD3-CD20-CD16- (null) population appeared to be also CD3-, CD20-, and CD16-. From these results, we would stress the significant contribution of CD3-CD20-CD16- null cells to the LAK phenomenon, which has not been focused on in PBL. 相似文献
10.
Antiviral effect of lymphokine-activated killer cells: characterization of effector cells mediating prophylaxis 总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3 下载免费PDF全文
Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells generated by cultivation of C57BL/6 mouse spleen cells in the presence of recombinant interleukin-2 were transferred into natural killer (NK) cell-deficient suckling mouse recipients. These mice were then challenged with either murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) or lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCMV) and sacrificed 3 days later. No interleukin 2 infusions were given. Mice receiving as few as 5 x 10(5) LAK cells had several 100-fold decreases in spleen MCMV titers as compared with untreated mice. This treatment had no effect on spleen LCMV titers. The LAK cell cultures contained 10 to 17% NK 1.1+, 50 to 55% Lyt-2+, and 33 to 50% immunoglobulin D+ cells. Double fluorescence labeling and in vitro cytotoxicity assays with fluorescence-activated cell sorting revealed at least two mutually exclusive killer cell populations. NK 1.1+ LAK cells resembled freshly isolated activated NK cells with regard to target cell range (YAC-1 cell killing greater than L-929, P815, and EL-4 cell killing), large granular lymphocyte (LGL) morphology, and decreased ability to lyse interferon (IFN)-treated target cells. Lyt-2+ LAK cells lysed the targets mentioned above but at lower levels and without the differences in susceptibility mentioned above. These Lyt-2+ LAK cells also had a decreased ability to lyse IFN-treated targets, in contrast to classic cytotoxic T lymphocytes, which lyse IFN-treated targets far more efficiently than untreated targets. Purified populations of LAK cells obtained by fluorescence-activated cell sorting were used in the antiviral protection model. The results showed that protection against MCMV could be mediated by NK 1.1+, NK 1.1-, Lyt-2+, Lyt-2-, and IgD- populations but not by IgD+ cells. The five protective populations all had in common the LGL phenotype and cytotoxic activity in vitro. The IgD+ population did not contain LGLs, lyse target cells in vitro, or mediate an antiviral effect in vivo. These results suggest that LAK cells may be therapeutically useful against certain virus infections (MCMV) but not others (LCMV) and that despite their heterogeneity in antigenic phenotype and cytotoxic activity, their pattern of antiviral activity in vivo resembles that of NK cells, which protect against MCMV but not LCMV. 相似文献
11.
Amerigo Boiardi Antonio Silvani Pier Adelchi Ruffini Licia Rivoltini Giorgio Parmiani Giovanni Broggi Andrea Salmaggi 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》1994,39(3):193-197
Nine patients with recurrent glioblastoma were given autologous adherent lymphokine-activated killer (A-LAK) cells and interleukin-2 (IL-2) administered directly into the tumor cavity through an Ommaya tube placed during surgery/biopsy. The immunotherapy was well tolerated and the response rate was 33% (one complete response, two partial responses, four with stable disease and two with progressive disease). However, survival 18 months from initial diagnosis did not differ from that reported in the literature for patients treated conventionally. Serial determinations of IL-2 in the tumor cavity during the course of treatment revealed that IL-2 concentrations were sufficient to maintain lymphocyte activation. Since steroid medication was discontinued during treatment and A-LAK cells have greater antitumor activity than standard LAK cells, other factors are discussed that might explain the limited results. 相似文献
12.
The generation of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells in vitro has been reported to require 100-1000 units of recombinant interleukin-2 (IL2). In this study we investigated the generation of human LAK cells with low-dose IL2 (1-10 U) in combination with human tumor cell lines. A significant LAK activity was generated within 3- to 5-days culture of PBL. Among six human tumor cell lines tested, the K562 cell line had the greatest stimulating activity, and the degree of cytotoxicity was comparative to that of PBL stimulated with higher doses of IL2 alone. The origin of this LAK activity was primarily the E(-) rosetting cell population. Cocultures of E- cells with 1 U/ml IL2 plus K562 had significantly higher cytotoxicity (P less than 0.05) compared to using E+ cells. Phenotypic analysis indicated that 1 U/ml IL2 plus K562 cell stimulation enhanced CD56+ and CD16+ cells. These studies suggest that very low dosages of IL2 with stimulator tumor cells can generate LAK activity comparable to that generated with high dosages of IL2 alone. 相似文献
13.
Similarities and distinctions between murine natural killer cells and lymphokine-activated killer cells 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Pretreatment of mice with rabbit anti-asialo GM1 removes both natural killer (NK) effector cells and NK cells responsive to interleukin 2 (IL-2). Spleen cells from these mice do possess normal lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity. Young mice (less than 3 weeks of age) do not have NK activity and do not possess IL-2-inducible NK effector cells. Similarly to anti-asialo GM1-treated mice, LAK cells can be generated from these mice. While these experiments indicate clear distinctions between a certain level of NK and LAK precursors, the distinctions are not as clear when analyzing mice congenitally deficient in NK cells. Beige mice which lack NK effector cells and IL-2-inducible NK cells also lack the ability to generate LAK cells. The relationships and differences between NK- and LAK-cell precursors and effectors are discussed. 相似文献
14.
We have generated lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells from human thymocytes in order to assess the relationship between LAK cells and T cells. Fresh thymocytes lack natural cytotoxic activity, and cytotoxicity cannot be stimulated by short term (1 hr) incubation with interferon or recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2). In addition, thymocytes are phenotypically devoid of cells bearing the natural killer (NK)-associated markers cluster designation (CD) 16 and NKH-1. After culture for 5 to 8 days with rIL-2, thymocytes display high levels of cytotoxic activity against both NK-sensitive and NK-resistant targets. Thymocytes require slightly more IL-2 than do peripheral blood lymphocytes to generate LAK activity. We have examined the phenotype of the thymocyte LAK precursor and effector cells. Thymocyte LAK precursors are of low to medium density, CD1-negative, and predominantly CD3-negative. Although CD3-positive cells proliferate in response to rIL-2, they are low in cytolytic capabilities. The effector cells, like the LAK precursors, are low to medium density lymphocytes. The cytotoxic cells are predominantly CD3-negative, and cytotoxic activity cannot be blocked with the use of anti-CD3 monoclonal antibodies. The effector cells also lack most NK-associated markers (HNK-1, and the CD16 markers Leu-11b and B73.1) but possess the NK-associated marker NKH-1 (N901). The responsive cell appears to be at a very early stage of thymic development, and it does not appear to either require or express the CD3-T cell receptor complex. 相似文献
15.
In vivo migration and tissue localization of highly purified lymphokine-activated killer cells (A-LAK cells) in tumor-bearing rats 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Our laboratory has previously reported that the adoptive transfer of highly purified lymphokine-activated killer cells (adherent-LAK, A-LAK) into Fischer 344 (F344) rats bearing established lung or liver micrometastases effectively reduced the resultant tumor growth more than 90%, leading to significant increases in animal survival (Cancer Res. 49, 1441, 1989). To begin to investigate the mechanism(s) by which A-LAK cells mediate this anti-tumor effect, we studied their migration patterns in F344 rats bearing experimentally induced lung and liver metastases as well as subcutaneous tumors. A-LAK cells which were phenotypically 95 to 100% natural killer cells/large granular lymphocytes were labeled with either 51Chromium or fluorescein diacetate (so as to be visualized microscopically). Intravenous injection of such labeled A-LAK cells did not show significant differences in their tissue distribution patterns in tumor-bearing versus normal rats, even when high levels of exogenous recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) was administered. A-LAK cells first migrated to the lungs and then subsequently migrated to the liver and spleen as early as 2 to 6 hr following iv injection. The kinetics of exit of A-LAK cells from the pulmonary capillary beds was not significantly different in rats bearing 3-day micrometastases or 14-day macrometastases compared to normal rats. Moreover, the presence of metastases in the liver did not alter the extent or kinetics of entry of A-LAK cells into the liver even in the presence of exogenously administered rIL-2. Finally, in rats bearing subcutaneous tumors, no evidence could be obtained that A-LAK cells were selectively localized to the tumor site. Tissue sections of livers from metastases-bearing animals injected with fluorescein diacetate labeled A-LAK cells did not demonstrate significant numbers of A-LAK cells infiltrating tumor nests with or without the administration of exogenous IL-2. These data suggest that A-LAK cells may mediate tumor regression in vivo by direct and indirect mechanisms, possibly through the secretion of cytokines and/or the recruitment of secondary effector cells. 相似文献
16.
Evidence that lymphokine-activated killer cells and natural killer cells are distinct based on an analysis of congenitally immunodeficient mice 总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12
G L Andriole J J Mulé C T Hansen W M Linehan S A Rosenberg 《Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)》1985,135(5):2911-2913
The in vitro incubation of lymphoid cells in RIL 2 results in the generation of LAK cells that are broadly lytic to autologous, syngeneic, and allogeneic fresh tumor cells, but which do not lyse fresh, normal cells. Strains of mice with congenital immunodeficiencies were tested both for the presence of NK cells and for their capacity to generate LAK cells after in vitro incubation with IL 2. Splenocytes obtained from two immunodeficient mouse strains (NIH-Beige-Nude and NIH-Beige-Nude-XID) failed to generate LAK cells, but displayed significant activity. Splenocytes from another immunodeficient mouse strain (NIH-Beige-XID) generated LAK cells but did not display NK cell activity. This dissociation of activation of LAK cells from NK cells among the immunodeficient strains indicates that the LAK and NK cell lytic systems are distinct. 相似文献
17.
The separation, characterization and functional assay of the inflammatory infiltrate present in the site of the lesion has been useful in the study of many diseases. Histochemical techniques for esterase and acid phosphatase, as well as the Phagocytose test and the Giemsa staining were applied to the study of the spleen-cell population of ten mice. A good characterization of the components of the Phagocytic Mononuclear System and the identification and quantification of the total cell population were obtained. 相似文献
18.
Murine lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells: phenotypic characterization of the precursor and effector cells 总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10
Murine and human lymphocytes incubated in recombinant interleukin 2 (RIL 2) generate a population of cytotoxic cells (lymphokine-activated killer cells [LAK]), which are able to lyse a wide array of fresh tumor cells but do not lyse fresh normal cells. Intravenous administration of these cells with the concomitant administration of RIL 2 can eliminate established pulmonary and hepatic metastases in mice. To characterize the cell that has in vitro LAK activity, we subdivided murine lymphocytes by lysing select subpopulations with the use of complement and antibodies against lymphocyte surface markers or by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. Thy-1.2-negative splenocytes were found to generate near normal amounts of LAK activity after RIL 2 incubation. Small and inconsistent LAK cell activity was generated from Thy-1.2-positive splenocytes. Ia-positive and surface immunoglobulin-positive splenocytes had little or no LAK precursor capability and did not appear to be necessary for LAK activation. Treatment of splenocytes with anti-asialo GM1 (anti-ASGM1) heterosera and complement markedly decreased their ability to generate LAK activity. At the effector stage, cytotoxic cells were of the Thy-1.2-positive, Ia-negative phenotype. Ia-depleted cells were separated into subpopulations bearing or not bearing the gamma Fc receptor (gamma FcR). The majority of cytotoxicity resided in gamma FcR-positive cells. Thus the precursors of murine LAK cells are "null" lymphocytes bearing neither T nor B cell surface markers but develop the Thy-1.2 cell surface marker in vitro, in association with the development of lytic activity for fresh tumor cells after stimulation by RIL 2. 相似文献
19.
M Sarneva N L Vujanovic M R Van den Brink R B Herberman J C Hiserodt 《Cellular immunology》1989,118(2):448-457
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
20.
R. E. Schwarz S. Iwatsuki R. B. Herberman T. L. Whiteside 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》1989,30(5):312-316
Summary Adherent lymphokine-activated killer cells (A-LAK cells) obtained from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells represent a population of potent antitumor effectors enriched in interleukin-2(IL-2)-activated natural killer cells. This study shows that A-LAK cells can be successfully generated from the blood of patients with liver cancer not treated with adjuvant chemotherapy or irradiation. Mononuclear cells were isolated from the blood of 33 patients with liver tumors (6 benign, 10 primary malignant, 17 metastatic) at the time of liver resection. A-LAK cells were separated by adherence to plastic following activation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in 1000 U/ml recombinant IL-2. A-LAK cells (enriched up to 92% in CD3–CD56+ cells) showed better subsequent expansion and two to six times higher antitumor cytotoxicity per cell than unseparated LAK cells cultured under the same conditions. The ability to generate A-LAK cells with superior in vitro cytotoxicity from the blood of most patients with liver cancer indicates that adoptive cellular immunotherapy may be a feasible and new way of treatment for primary and secondary hepatic neoplasms in man. 相似文献