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Specific versus nonspecific target cell destruction by T lymphocytes sensitized in vitro. I. Kinetics
Authors:I Tsutsui  N B Everett
Affiliation:Department of Biological Structure, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A.
Abstract:An in vitro culture method giving a high cell recovery rate of 25–38% has been developed to generate a relatively pure population of T cell progeny reacting to xenogeneic cell antigen. The method is basically a modification of the Ginsburg method and utilizes mosaic monolayers that are comprised of syngeneic Lewis and xenogeneic BALB/c fibroblasts. Thoracic duct lymphocytes of Lewis rats were cultured for 6 days on these monolayers and the resulting lymphocyte population, rich in blast cells, was collected and separated free of contaminating fibroblasts by an additional 6 hr incubation without monolayers. Cytotoxic activity of these harvested lymphocytes was assessed by a modification of the Hellström method in which embryonic target fibroblasts, Lewis or BALB/c, were plated at a critical density of 2200 cells/cm2 of culture area. This, coupled with the use of a newly developed culture medium, allowed the demonstration of specific as well as nonspecific activity of up to 100% suppression at 48 hr of test incubation. The specific activity was clarified and determined critically by comparing the activity of these lymphocytes to that of lymphocytes grown on syngeneic monolayers, though rich in blast cells, reacting only to the horse serum in the medium. The nonspecific activity was not due to the deterioration of test cultures and needed the continued presence of fully active blast cells for complete suppression of the target cell growth in the later phase of test cultures. By changing the ratio of lymphocytes to target cells and following the kinetics of target cell destruction, it was shown that specific activity effects an active killing of target cells, whereas the nonspecific activity was primarily the suppression of target cell growth. The specific activity was effective with far less lymphocytes per target cell; was nearly complete by 12 hr of test cultures while the nonspecific activity was complete at 48 hr. Yet, the increase in the specific activity was nearly proportional to that of nonspecific activity and even the nonspecific activity seemed to kill sensitive Lewis target cells at its full intensity. These observations are in accordance with an interpretation of the mechanism of the specific target cell destruction as involving contact and recognition followed by the release of lymphotoxin into or onto target cells.
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