Abstract

Studies were undertaken to evaluate the cytotoxic capacity of human peripheral blood lymphocytes activated by either supernatants (CFM) derived from lymphocyte cultures or lymphocytes treated for 60 min at 45 degrees C. The effect of the addition of heat-treated cells on the cytotoxic activity of CFM-induced effector cells was also studied. CFM from either unmixed or mixed cultures of lymphocytes was capable of activating cytotoxic effector cells. These effector cells could kill any allogeneic target cells but failed to effect cytotoxicity on the target cells autologous to the responding cells. Both the heat-treated cells and CFM from cultures of these cells also activated lymphocytes to cytotoxic effector cells having specific receptors for nonself antigens. The question of whether heat-treated cells activate cytotoxic cells by themselves or through secreted soluble factor cannot yet be clearly answered. The findings of the present investigation suggest that expression of cytotoxicity induced in MLC is not necessarily restricted to the target cells syngeneic to the stimulator cells, but can be extended to any allogeneic target cells by the indirect effect of soluble factor secreted from stimulated cells that causes a polyclonal activation of cytotoxic precursors in the responding cell populations. The present findings also emphasize the need for caution in the use of heat-treated lymphocytes as innocent-bystander cells in MLC to provide additional cytotoxic specificities in the responder cells, since heat-treated cells alone can activate lymphocytes to cytotoxic effector cells that kill any allogeneic target cells.

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