Abstract
PPD augmented human lymphocyte blastogeneic response to allogeneic lymphocytes in the mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) and generation of human cytotoxic lymphocytes against allogeneic human lymphocytes in in vitro sensitization (IVS) culture. The augmenting effect of PPD in the MLR was unequivocally synergistic at its lower concentrations (0.05 and 0.01 microgram/ml). The augmentation of MLR was observed following addition of a supernatant of culture medium of lymphocytes which had been precultured with PPD for 24 h then washed free of PPD and recultured without PPD for another 24 h. PHA and Con A, in contrast, suppressed both MLR and the generation of alloreactive cytotoxic cells. The alloreactive cytotoxic lymphocytes whose generation was augmented by PPD belonged to the SRBC-rosette forming fraction and passed through a nylon-wool column. The NK cell-like activities of the alloreactive cytotoxic lymphocytes were not augmented by PPD. Analysis of the alloreactive cytotoxic lymphocytes whose generation was augmented by PPD by competitive inhibition assay with unlabeled cells indicated that the same allogeneic lymphocytes used as sensitizing cells in IVS culture inhibited the cytotoxicity, while MOLT-4 cells, which are frequently used as target cells for the human NK-cell assay, did not. When lymphocytes with known HLA-A and HLA-B were used in the IVS culture and the cytotoxicity assay, PPD was found to augment the cytotoxicity only against the target lymphocytes that possessed the same HLA as the sensitizing lymphocytes in IVS.
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