Publication | Open Access
Development of large granular lymphocytes with anomalous, nonspecific cytotoxicity in clones derived from Ly-2+ T cells.
54
Citations
11
References
1983
Year
Filler CellsLymphocyte DevelopmentImmunologyT CellsImmunotherapyHematologyLimit DilutionCell TransplantationRadiation OncologyNonspecific CytotoxicityHealth SciencesLarge Granular LymphocytesLymphoid NeoplasiaLy-2+ T CellsGranulocyteAutoimmunityCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentCancer ImmunosurveillanceCellular Immune ResponseAdult T-cell Leukemia-lymphomaMedicine
T cells cultured at limit dilution for 8 days in a concanavalin A-stimulated, filler-cell and growth factor-supported system produced cytolytic clones with high efficiency. These clones were not specific, lysing a wide range of targets, syngeneic and allogeneic, of tumor and normal cell origin. Lysis was a cell-mediated phenomenon but was not blocked by anti-Ly-2. One H-2-negative target was lysed, but one was resistant. Xenogeneic (human) tumor cells were not lysed. The cells in the clones were large, vacuolated, granular lymphocytes. They originated from single Ly-2+ responder cells and not from irradiated filler cells. Therefore, activated lymphocyte killers and other natural killer-like cells may be differentiated elements of the Ly-2+ T-cell lineage.
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