Moingeon P, Ythier A, Nowill A, Delmon L, Bayle C, Pico J L, Bohuon C, Hercend T
Blood. 1986 Mar;67(3):777-83.
Following a cryopreservation step, short-term cultures of circulating leukemic blasts from a patient with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were performed. Because cultured tumor cells became susceptible to natural killer (NK) activity, in vitro alteration of the blasts was studied. Immediately after thawing, cell suspensions consisted of a relatively homogeneous population of undifferentiated blasts. In culture, tritiated thymidine uptake by the leukemic cells was low during the first 24 hours and then increased (X20) to a peak on day 7. The cell concentration started to increase on day 4. On day 8, less than 10% of the cultured cells still appeared as undifferentiated blasts, whereas up to 60% were granular and 30% to 40% had a monocytoid morphology. Prior to being cultured, the blasts were resistant to resting and IL2-activated natural killing. When the kinetics of in vitro acquired susceptibility were studied, it was found that maximum cytotoxicity against these leukemic cells was reached within 24 hours. Thus, the blasts had become NK-sensitive prior to increase in DNA synthesis, proliferation, and differentiation based on morphological and cytochemical criteria. In contrast, there was a positive correlation between acquired susceptibility and surface expression of an activation antigen, termed TNKtar. To dissect further the mechanisms of acquired susceptibility, a series of six NK clones representing four distinct phenotypes of NK active lymphocytes were tested against the leukemic cells. Immediately after thawing, blasts were essentially resistant to all clones, whereas they were strongly killed by 5 of 6 clones when cultured for 24 hours. Cold target inhibition assays indicated that resistance of fresh blasts was likely to be due to a binding defect. These results suggested that tumor cells became susceptible because they surface-expressed NK target structure(s) in the early phase of an activation process leading to their proliferation and/or differentiation. This hypothesis was substantiated for one clone, termed JT9, because the anti-TNKtar antibody blocked cytotoxicity of JT9 cells against the cultured blasts.
在进行冷冻保存步骤后,对一名急性髓系白血病(AML)患者的循环白血病原始细胞进行了短期培养。由于培养的肿瘤细胞对自然杀伤(NK)活性变得敏感,因此对原始细胞的体外变化进行了研究。解冻后立即发现,细胞悬液由相对均匀的未分化原始细胞群体组成。在培养过程中,白血病细胞对氚标记胸腺嘧啶核苷的摄取在最初24小时较低,然后增加(增加20倍),并在第7天达到峰值。细胞浓度在第4天开始增加。在第8天,培养的细胞中不到10%仍表现为未分化的原始细胞,而高达60%为颗粒状,30%至40%具有单核细胞样形态。在培养前,原始细胞对静止和IL-2激活的自然杀伤具有抗性。当研究体外获得敏感性的动力学时,发现对这些白血病细胞的最大细胞毒性在24小时内达到。因此,根据形态学和细胞化学标准,原始细胞在DNA合成、增殖和分化增加之前就已对NK敏感。相反,获得的敏感性与一种称为TNKtar的激活抗原的表面表达呈正相关。为了进一步剖析获得敏感性的机制,测试了代表NK活性淋巴细胞四种不同表型的一系列六个NK克隆对白血病细胞的作用。解冻后立即发现,原始细胞对所有克隆基本具有抗性,而在培养24小时后,它们被6个克隆中的5个强烈杀伤。冷靶抑制试验表明,新鲜原始细胞的抗性可能是由于结合缺陷。这些结果表明,肿瘤细胞变得敏感是因为它们在导致其增殖和/或分化的激活过程早期表面表达了NK靶结构。这一假设在一个名为JT9的克隆中得到了证实,因为抗TNKtar抗体阻断了JT9细胞对培养的原始细胞的细胞毒性。