Clonal analysis of human tumor infiltrating lymphocytes reactive with autologous tumor cells: different target cell specificities of NK-like and cytotoxic T-cell clones
- PMID: 3102075
- DOI: 10.1016/0008-8749(87)90023-2
Clonal analysis of human tumor infiltrating lymphocytes reactive with autologous tumor cells: different target cell specificities of NK-like and cytotoxic T-cell clones
Abstract
Lymphocytes, derived from surgically resected lung carcinoid tissue, were stimulated in mixed culture with irradiated autologous tumor cells (MLTC). The autologous MLTC-stimulated lymphocytes were found to have killing activity against both autologous tumor cells and NK-sensitive target cells. The lymphoblasts generated during MLTC were isolated and cloned under limiting dilution conditions in the presence of interleukin 2. The cloned cell lines were analyzed for cell phenotype and tested for cytotoxic activity. Three cloned cell lines, out of 19 tested, were found to be cytotoxic either against NK-sensitive target cells (natural killers) or the autologous tumor cells. Two clones, having OKT8 phenotype, caused no lysis of the autologous tumor cells, though both exerted NK-like activity against K562 cells. Only one clone with OKT4 phenotype showed specific cytotoxic activity against the autologous tumor, but no NK-like activity against a panel of tumor target cells. These results suggest the coexistence of two types of antitumor cytotoxic lymphocytes at the tumor site: precursors of NK-like cells and specific cytotoxic T cells. Target cell specificity provided a means of distinguishing between the two types.
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