Shenoy A M, Brahmi Z
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis 46202-5128.
Cell Immunol. 1991 Nov;138(1):24-34. doi: 10.1016/0008-8749(91)90129-y.
Recent evidence from our laboratory has demonstrated that NK/LAK cell activation of human lymphocytes is protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent. Here, we have investigated the translocation of PKC in human NK cells exposed to sensitive targets or to PMA, a phorbol ester. In NK cells exposed to K562 for 6 hr, we observed a weak translocation of PKC whereas in NK cells exposed to PMA more than 90% of cytosolic PKC was translocated to the membrane in less than 5 min. Stimulation of NK cells with an NK-resistant target, however, did not translocate PKC even after 6 hr. Translocation of PKC to the membrane was followed by the appearance of PKM, the cytosolic calcium/phospholipid (Ca2+/PL)-independent form of PKC. The conversion of PKC to PKM was mediated by calpain, an intracellular calcium-dependent thiol proteinase. When we used two inhibitors of calpain, calpain inhibitor I (CI-I) and calpain inhibitor II (CI-II), both caused a dose-related enhancement of NK-CMC when the inhibitors were present throughout the 3-hr chromium release assay. This enhancement could be circumvented by PMA or by the PKC inhibitor H-7. CI-I and CI-II added together caused a greater increase in NK-CMC than when each was added alone. CI-I and CI-II also enhanced antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC), substantiating further our previous contention that the activation of both NK-CMC and ADCC may involve a common lytic pathway. Activation of NK cells with IL-2 for 18 hr at 37 degrees C was inhibited in the presence of CI-I. To investigate a possible feedback inhibition mechanism due to the buildup of PKC, we examined phosphatidylinositol (PI) metabolism in NK cells activated by IL-2 in either the presence or the absence of CI-I. We observed a significant decrease in PI turnover when NK cells, activated in the presence of IL-2 and CI-I, were stimulated with K562 as compared to NK cells activated by IL-2 alone, then stimulated with K562.