Mode of in vitro augmentation of natural killer cell activity by recombinant human interleukin 2: a comparative study of Leu-11+ and Leu-11- cell populations in cord blood and adult peripheral blood.

Abstract
Human newborn natural killer (NK) cell activity against K562 target cells was observed to be low compared with adult controls. Although Leu-7 (HNK-1)+ cells were negligible in cord blood, the proportions of Leu-11+ cells were equal to those of adult peripheral blood. Leu-11+ cells sorted from cord blood lymphocytes, as well as from adult lymphocytes exhibited the morphology of granular lymphocytes. In this study, we have investigated the phenotypic characterization of recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL 2)-induced cytotoxic lymphocytes against K562 cells by using anti-Leu-11 monoclonal antibody. Spontaneous cytotoxicity of lymphocytes was restricted to Leu-11+ cells in cord blood, as well as in adult blood, but this activity was low in cord blood Leu-11+ cells as compared with that of adult ones. NK cell activity of adult Leu-11+ cells could not be additionally enhanced after an 18-hr incubation with rIL 2(25 U/ml), whereas rIL 2 could potentiate the cytotoxicity of cord blood Leu-11+ cells approximately to the adult levels. It should be noted that cytotoxic activity of both Leu-11- cells from cord blood and adult blood that had no basal NK cells activity could be significantly potentiated by rIL 2. On the other hand, lymphokine-activated killer cells cytotoxic for HL-60 cell line could not be generated, and no proliferation of the lymphocytes was detected after an 18-hr incubation with rIL 2. It was shown that rIL 2 could not enhance the ability to bind to target cells in Leu-11+ and Leu-11- cells by means of a single cell conjugate assay, but the rate of target lysis of Leu-11+ cells from cord blood was significantly enhanced by rIL 2. These results suggested that rIL 2-induced cytotoxic effector cells were heterogeneous, and rIL 2 might potentiate the cytotoxicity of functionally immature NK cells or NK precursor cells.

This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit: