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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 146, Issue 10 3280-3288, Copyright © 1991 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

Generation of lymphokine-activated killer activity in T cells. Possible regulatory circuits

RL Geller, MJ Smyth, SL Strobl, FH Bach, FW Ruscetti, DL Longo and AC Ochoa
Immunobiology Research Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455.

CD4+ and CD8+ T cells do not develop significant lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity when PBL are cultured with IL-2 or even when they are activated with a T cell stimulus such as OKT3 mAb. The possibility that a T cell regulatory mechanism prevents the development of LAK activity by CD4+ or CD8+ cells in OKT3 mAb and IL-2 cultures was tested by depleting CD8+ or CD4+ cells from PBL before stimulation with OKT3 and IL-2. Under these conditions, the remaining CD4+ and CD8+ cells were able to generate non-MHC-restricted lysis of NK-resistant tumor targets. Our data suggested that a regulatory signal was present in the culture to prevent the development of lytic function by T cells. T cells removed from the PBL cultures were, upon culture with IL-2, able to generate high LAK activity, suggesting that inhibition of the CD4+ or CD8+ T cell-mediated LAK activity was an active ongoing process, which blocked the lysis at the level of the activated cell and not the precursor cell. Mixing experiments demonstrated that the CD4+ or the CD8+ cells isolated from the PBL cultures were able to inhibit the development of lytic function in the CD4-depleted and CD8-depleted cultures. Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) has been shown to block LAK activity of NK cells in IL-2-stimulated cultures. When TGF- beta was added to CD4(+)- or CD8(+)-depleted cultures, it also inhibited LAK activity of T cells in a dose-dependent fashion, without interfering with T cell growth. Lytic activity returned to activated levels when TGF-beta was removed from the culture medium, thereby demonstrating the reversibility of TGF-beta inhibition.


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