Abstract

Donor regulatory T cells (CD3+ alphabetaT-cell receptor [TCR]+) derived from the repopulating host thymus have been shown to be primarily responsible for suppression of GVHD following DLI therapy in murine BMT models. However, natural killer (NK) T cells also have regulatory properties, and a role for NK T cells in suppression of GVH reactivity has not been completely excluded. NK cells may also contribute to the graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect associated with DLI therapy. In this study, we used a murine BMT model (C57BL/6 into AKR) to study whether depletion of donor NK cells had any impact on the suppression of GVH reactivity after DLI or on the DLI-induced GVL effect against acute T-cell leukemia. Depletion of donor NK cells was accomplished in vivo by giving DLI-treated bone marrow chimeras multiple injections of anti-NK1.1 monoclonal antibody (MoAb). The chimeras treated with anti-NK1.1 MoAb had significantly fewer splenic NK1.1 cells than nontreated chimeras, and splenocytes from anti-NK1.1-treated mice were deficient in the ability to generate lymphokine-activated lytic activity. Results presented here showed that NK-cell depletion had no effect on the suppression of GVH reactivity after DLI. When DLI-treated chimeras were challenged with an acute T-cell leukemia, NK-cell depletion had no discernible effect on GVL reactivity. These preclinical data suggest that donor NK cells do not have a significant role in the suppression of GVHD after DLI or in the mediation of GVL reactivity induced by DLI.

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