Freshly isolated B cells from chronic lymphocytic leukaemia patients (B-CLL) have been previously shown to induce a strong proliferative response and high levels of NK-like activity in lymphocytes from healthy donors. The present paper deals with the origin, mitotic state, target spectrum and cell surface phenotype of the NK-like effectors generated after stimulation with B-CLL. Experiments using large granular lymphocytes (LGL) and T cells as responders demonstrated that most of the precursors of the newly generated NK-like effectors express the CD3 antigen. The induction of NK-like activity paralleled cell activation, as judged by blast transformation, thymidine uptake and appearance of cell surface activation markers. The newly generated NK-like effectors displayed a T cell phenotype and a broader target repertoire than native NK cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Mitogen-transformed human peripheral blood lymphocytes and tonsil blasts were examined by rosette formation to detect the presence of membrane-bound immunoglobulin (Ig) and surface receptors for fixed IgG and fixed C3. In addition, the capacity of these cells to rosette with sheep erythrocytes was evaluated as a reaction characteristic of T lymphocytes. In order for clear morphological recognition of the rosetting transformed lymphocytes and the rosetting tonsil blasts a cytocentrifuge technique was developed and used in conjunction with autoradiography and/or with Romanowsky stains. Using these techniques and the culture methods described in this paper phytohaemagglutinin, pokeweed mitogen, streptococcal filtrates and purified protein derivative stimulated predominantly T cells in the peripheral blood of man. A minority of the transformed cells in these mitogen-stimulated cultures (<24%) did rosette with B lymphocyte markers and presumably represent a B-cell response. No significant differences were found between the T- or B-cell specificity of the mitogens investigated. Lymphoid preparations from tonsils excised from normal donors with recurrent tonsillitis were found to contain 6-15% lymphoblasts and the iarge majority of these cells formed rosettes with the B-cell markers, less than 20% of these lymphoblasts formed spontaneous sheep erythrocyte rosettes. Using a mixed rosetting technique a small proportion (<5%) of PHA-transformed cells and tonsil lymphoblasts were found to have combined sheep Fc or combined sheep C3 receptors. The investigation of B- and T-lymphocyte surface markers on mitogentransformed lymphocytes was extended to neopiastic lymphocyte populations and it was found that the majority of transformed cells (>70%) present in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia cultures stimulated with PHA after 6 days incubation were transformed T lymphocytes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Published
1974
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