Murine interleukin-2 generates glycogen-rich and mucus-secreting NK cells
- PMID: 6192079
- PMCID: PMC1454326
Murine interleukin-2 generates glycogen-rich and mucus-secreting NK cells
Abstract
Colonies of cells termed 'giant granular leucocytes' (GGL) displaying natural killer (NK) activity were generated in cell culture. The prominent feature of these cells was the formation of large cytoplasmic pool--the 'theca'--filled up with glycogen. This was demonstrated by the strong positive red staining of the theca with periodic acid Schiff reagent (PAS) which was abolished by prior treatment with amylase. Two different procedures were employed for obtaining colonies of NK-GGL. In the first, mice were injected either with killed Corynebacterium parvum or with killed Bordetella pertusis preparations and their mesenteric lymph-node cells were grown on syngeneic X-irradiated embryonic skin fibroblast monolayers. At the foci of GGL formation the fibroblasts were killed and the cleared areas thus formed were populated by adherent GGL. In the second procedure, supernates from rat or mouse spleen cultures stimulated with concanavalin A (Con A)--Interleukin-2 (IL-2)--were added to cultures of spleen and lymph-node cells prepared from either ordinary or from athymic nude mice. Richest GGL populations developed when rat IL-2 was added to cells of nude mice. Mouse IL-2 was less consistent. With nude mouse cells it stimulated, either mast cells or GGL, or both; rat IL-2 did not stimulate mast-cell differentiation in nude mouse cultures. In contrast, supernates from lymph-node cell cultures prepared from mice infected with Schistosoma mansoni. Mucosal mast cell-stimulating factor (MMSF) stimulated the formation of colonies of mast cells but not GGL. When MMSF was added as late as 23 days, colonies of young mast cells appeared and mast cells progressively increased in number. When rat IL-2 was added to such mature mast-cell cultures on the 30th day, colonies of cytolytic-GGL appeared. These observations indicate that precursors of mast cells and GGL persist in the cultures and preserve their potential to be stimulated by T-cell factors. GGL-NK cells developed on monolayers prepared from whole embryos released substance that displayed morphology and staining characteristic of mucus. Evidence gathered from in-vitro and in-vivo studies links the in-vitro GGL-NK cells to motile cells that inhabit the mucosal epithelium. Based on the observations, a hypothesis on the function of NK cytotoxicity is brought forward. It proposes the replacement of ordinary epithelial cells, which are killed during a proliferative and differentiative response of other cells at the onset of an infection course.
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