Suppressive effect of human natural killer cells on Epstein-Barr virus-induced immunoglobulin synthesis.

Author:

Kuwano K,Arai S,Munakata T,Tomita Y,Yoshitake Y,Kumagai K

Abstract

Abstract The suppressive effect of human natural killer (NK) cells on Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-induced immunoglobulin (Ig) synthesis by autologous B cells was investigated. By Percoll discontinuous density gradient centrifugation, low-density fractions enriched for NK cells were isolated from human peripheral blood lymphocytes. These NK-enriched fractions were added to purified autologous B cells in the presence of EBV, were cultivated for 8 days, and were examined for their suppressive effect on Ig synthesis by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The fractions markedly suppressed both IgM and IgG synthesis induced by EBV. It was possible to reduce the suppressive effect of NK-enriched cells by complement-dependent lysis of NK cells and Leu-11, but not by OKT3 monoclonal antibody, indicating that NK cells may be responsible for the suppression of Ig synthesis. Upon close examination of interferon (IFN) activity, it was revealed that the co-cultures of NK-enriched cells and EBV-infected B cells generated production of IFN-alpha, which might be produced by NK cells in response to EBV-stimulated B cells. Addition of anti-IFN-alpha but not anti-IFN-gamma serum almost completely abrogated the suppressive effect of NK-enriched cells on Ig synthesis, indicating that IFN-alpha produced are required for the NK cell-mediated suppression of Ig synthesis. However, addition of IFN-alpha into purified B cells showed no direct suppressive effect on EBV-induced Ig synthesis by B cells in the absence of NK cells. Nevertheless, NK cells when previously incubated with IFN-alpha and added to B cells showed a suppressor activity on Ig synthesis to a level higher than that of untreated NK controls. These results strongly suggest the possibility that NK cells display an interaction with EBV-infected B cells and produce IFN-alpha, which in turn activates NK cells. These activated NK cells suppress the Ig synthesis by B cells, which undergo transformation induced by EBV.

Publisher

The American Association of Immunologists

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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