Publication | Open Access
Specificity of human natural killer cells in limiting dilution culture for determinants of herpes simplex virus type 1 glycoproteins
29
Citations
26
References
1986
Year
Viral ReplicationMolecular VirologyAllergyMedicineImmunologyAntiviral ResponseVirologyHerpesvirusesAutoimmunityDilution CultureGlycoprotein BImmunologic MechanismChronic Viral InfectionNatural KillerImmunotherapyNk CellsCell BiologyNatural Killer Cells
The frequency and specificity of human cells with natural killer (NK) cytotoxic activity for herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)-infected targets was measured by limiting dilution culture. The frequency of NK cell precursors (NK-p) reactive with HSV-1-infected cells was 2- to 11-fold higher than that of NK-p reactive with mock-infected cells. The frequency of NK-p reactive with infected target cells lacking viral glycoprotein C or presenting an antigenically altered glycoprotein B was approximately twofold lower than that with wild-type virus-infected cells. Specificity analysis demonstrated that NK cells with a high statistical probability of being monoclonal were reactive with either glycoprotein B or C. These results provide the first evidence that cells with human NK activity possess clonal specificity for HSV-1-infected target cells.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1