Affiliation:
1. Kimmel Cancer Institute, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107, USA.
Abstract
Human natural killer (NK) cell differentiation from immature lineage negative (Lin-) umbilical cord blood cells was examined in vitro. Cells expressing differentiation antigens of mature NK cells (CD56, CD16, CD2, CD8, NKR-P1A) were generated from Lin- cells cultured with interleukin (IL)-2 and a murine bone marrow stromal cell line expressing the human membrane-bound form of stem cell factor. Two subsets of NK cells were identified in these cultures: one expressed both NKR-P1A and CD56 and, in variable proportions, all other NK cell differentiation antigens; the second subset expressed only NKR-P1A and, unlike the former, was not cytotoxic. Neither subset expressed interferon (IFN)-gamma mRNA even after stimulation with phorbol di-ester and Ca2+ ionophore, but both expressed tumor necrosis factor alpha mRNA and the cytotoxic granule-associated proteins TIA-1, perforin, and serine esterase-1. After 10-d culture with IL-2, IL-12, and irradiated B lymphoblastoid cells, approximately 45% of the NKR-P1A+/ CD56- cells became CD56+, and the same cultures contained cells capable of cytotoxicity and of IFN-gamma production. These results indicate that NKR-P1A expression in the absence of other NK cell markers defines an intermediate, functionally immature stage of NK cell differentiation, and that effector functions develop in these cells, concomitantly with CD56 expression, in the presence of IL-12. These cells likely represent the counterpart of a CD3-/NKR-P1A+/ CD56-/CD16- cell subset that, as shown here, is present both in adult and neonatal circulating lymphocytes.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
105 articles.
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