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Lysis of fresh human tumor cells by autologous large granular lymphocytes from peripheral blood and pleural effusions
Author(s) -
Uchida Atsushi,
Micksche Michael
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.2910320107
Subject(s) - percoll , cytotoxic t cell , peripheral blood mononuclear cell , k562 cells , pleural effusion , cytotoxicity , lymphocyte , lysis , immunology , pathology , biology , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , in vitro , leukemia , biochemistry
Human lymphocytes and their subpopulations from the peripheral blood and pleural effusions of cancer patients were tested for cytotoxicity against fresh tumor cells isolated from carcinomatous pleural effusions of the same patients. Fresh tumor cells were relatively resistant to lysis by autologous unseparated lymphocytes in a 4 h Cr‐release assay. Positive reactions were recorded in 10 of 38 blood samples and 10 of 37 effusion specimens. Purification of large granular lymphocytes (LGL) by discontinuous Percoll gradient centrifugation resulted in enhancement of cytotoxic activity against autologous tumor cells and K562 cells, with no reactivity in LGL‐depleted small T‐lymphocyte populations. Significant lysis of effusion tumor cells by autologous LGL was observed in 15 of 22 blood specimens and 15 of 21 effusion samples. Further depletion of high‐affinity sheep erythrocyte resetting cells from Percoll‐purified LGL populations gave an increase in autologous tumor‐killing activity. Depletion of LGL/K562 conjugates from LGL populations decreased lysis of autologous tumor cells and K562 cells. Effusion tumor cells that were susceptible to lysis by allogeneic normal LGL were also killed by autologous LGL, and effusion tumor cells resistant to lysis by allogeneic NK cells were not lysed by autologous LGL. In a single‐cell cytotoxicity assay in agarose, 4–26% LGL bound autologous tumor cells and 0.2–5% LGL killed these target cells, while 12–45% LGL bound K562 cells and 2–20% LGL lysed them. These results indicate that cytotoxic potential for autologous effusion tumor cells is present in the peripheral blood and pleural effusions of cancer patients; it is strongly associated with a minor proportion of LGL and restricted to the cell population that can lyse NK‐sensitive K562 cells.