Demonstration by class I gene transfer that reduced susceptibility of human cells to natural killer cell-mediated lysis is inversely correlated with HLA class I antigen expression
- PMID: 2707298
- DOI: 10.1002/eji.1830190306
Demonstration by class I gene transfer that reduced susceptibility of human cells to natural killer cell-mediated lysis is inversely correlated with HLA class I antigen expression
Abstract
HLA antigen-loss mutants and class I gene transferents were used to analyze the influence of class I expression on natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis. Only HLA antigen-loss mutants that had lost expression of either HLA-A and HLA-B antigens (mutant .184) or of HLA-A, B and C antigens (mutant .221) were distinctly susceptible to NK-mediated lysis. Mutants with reduced expression of class II antigens but unaltered expression of class I antigens remained resistant to NK lysis. A direct demonstration of the effect of class I antigen expression on human cells was made by analyzing a variety of gene transferents of the HLA-A, B, C null mutant .221 expressing only one transferred HLA-A, B or C gene. These results specifically show that expression of class I antigens, with a possible preferential effect of HLA-B expression, reduces the susceptibility of mutant .221 to NK-mediated lysis.
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