Characterization of alloimmunization-induced T lymphocytes reactive against AKR leukemia in vitro and correlation with graft-vs-leukemia activity in vivo.

Abstract
We have reported that immunization of H-2k mice with lymphoid cells from various allogeneic strains induced a population of cells that could eliminate first-passage spontaneous AKR leukemia from the spleens of immuno-suppressed AKR (H-2k) hosts. In the present study, we examined the nature of the cells responsible for this graft-vs-leukemia (GVL) reaction and compared them to cytolytic cells detected in vitro. Spleen cells from alloimmunized CBA/J (H-2k) mice were selectively depleted of various subpopulations by treatment with antibody and complement (C), then tested in vivo for GVL reactivity. Cell suspensions depleted of Thy-1.2+, Lyt-1+, or Lyt-2+ lymphocytes had no significant GVL reactivity, whereas suspensions depleted of NK-1.2+ cells retained GVL reactivity. The GVL-reactive cells persisted in H-2-compatible donor mice for up to 56 days. Lyt-1+2+ lymphocytes that were cytotoxic for cultured AKR leukemia cells in vitro could be detected in the spleens of alloimmunized H-2-compatible mice after expansion of the cells in T cell growth factor. Using quantitative limiting dilution cytotoxicity assays, we found that the frequency of leukemia-reactive cytotoxic lymphocytes (CL) in the spleen showed a direct correlation with the GVL efficacy of the cells in vivo. Alloimmunization was essential for induction of the GVL-reactive cell population. CL in alloimmunized mice consisted of heterogeneous cytotoxic specificities; i.e., some CL were leukemia-specific, others lysed only nonleukemic AKR target cells, and a third group mediated killing of both leukemic and nonleukemic target cells. The CL appeared to be H-2 restricted and specific for non-H-2 antigens shared by the AKR leukemia and the alloimmunizing cells.

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