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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 137, Issue 10 3080-3086, Copyright © 1986 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

Class I MHC antigens in the generation and expression of promiscuous cytotoxic cell function

KP Kane and WR Clark

In recent years investigators from a number of laboratories have described antigen nonspecific, lymphocyte-mediated cytotoxicity generated by TCGF alone, in the absence of antigen or mitogen. The exact origin of the cells mediating this cytotoxicity, in either mouse or humans, is unknown. We found that when mouse spleen cells are incubated with higher than normal concentrations of TCGF, good levels of cytotoxicity toward allogeneic, NK, and untransformed self target cells are generated by day 5 or 6 in culture. We were unable to block the lysis of any of these target cells with antibodies to target cell class I antigens. However, generation of this cytotoxicity from naive spleen cells was very strongly blocked by anti-class I MHC antibodies. When T cells from spleen were extensively purified, they did not respond to TCGF at any concentration unless adherent cells were added back. Generation of cytotoxicity under these conditions was also blocked by class I antibodies. Generation of promiscuous killing activity by PMA and ionomycin, on the other hand, was class I independent. Our data suggest that pre-CTL, under the influence of TCGF, can be activated to CTL and that under the continued influence of TCGF can be driven into a so-called "promiscuous" state of cytotoxicity. Possible roles for class I antigens in this process are discussed.





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