Effects of cyclosporin on C57BL/6 splenocytes before and after culture with high-dose recombinant interleukin-2: Implications for immunosuppression with cyclosporin

Abstract
Lymphokine-activated killer cells appear to arise from precursor cells bearing natural killer (NK) cell antigens. Cyclosporin (CsA) is a well-known immunosuppressive agent that can down-regulate NK cell cytotoxicity. Studies were initiated to evaluate the effects of CsA on splenocytes before and after exposure to recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2). Normal C57BL/6 mice receiving CsA at a dose of 100 mg/kg demonstrated a decrease in NK cell lysis against the YAC-1 lymphoma target in a 4-h chromium-release assay. When splenocytes obtained from CsA-treated mice were cultured for 3 days in complete medium containing 1000 U rIL-2/ml, they demonstrated a return of NK cell lysis to normal (mean cytotoxicity = 65 LU versus 60 LU for control and CsA-exposed splenocytes respectively;P, NS, five consecutive experiments) but revealed a decrease in the lysis of a NK-resistant target: the MCA-102 sarcoma (mean cytotoxicity = 20 LU vs 12 LU for control and CsA-exposed splenocytes respectively;P <0.02, five consecutive experiments). Fresh splenocytes cultured in media containing rIL-2 and CsA demonstrated a decrease in proliferation, cell-cycle S-phase fraction and cell yields compared to splenocytes cultured in media containing rIL-2 alone. In addition, a decrease in tumor cell lysis for NK-cell sensitive (mean percentage lysis = 98% vs 60%, rIL-2 vs rIL-2 + CsA; effector-to-target ratio 100: 1) and resistant targets (mean percentage lysis = 68% vs 28%, rIL-2 vs rIL-2 + CsA; effector-to-target ratio 100: 1) was also seen. CsA had no effects on the phenotypic antigenic expression of splenocytes cultured with high-dose rIL-2 although activated T cell antigens were down-regulated when fresh splenocytes were evaluated after in vivo exposure to CsA. These studies support the down-regulating effects of CsA on NK cell lysis and suggest that the rIL-2-activated cell population is heterogeneous as demonstrated by the differential down-regulation and recovery of NK-resistant cell lysis versus NK-sensitive cell lysis.

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