Abstract

We have previously shown that interleukin-2 (IL-2) is able to induce the generation of natural killer (NK) activity in bone marrow (BM) cells from mice pretreated with 5-fluorouracil. IL-2 alone could dose-dependently induce NK activity in marrow cells and interleukin-4 (IL-4) has dual effect on the NK activity in that, depending on the concentration of IL-2, IL-4 inhibits or stimulates development of NK cells. The inhibitory effect was in part antagonized by interleukin-1α. These effects were not obtained when NK-reactive spleen cells were cultured with the same concentrations of IL-2 or IL-2 plus IL-4 with or without irradiated BM cells as feeders. The effects of IL-4 were also obtained by preincubation for 6–24 hr before culturing with IL-2 alone and correlated with the expression of interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2/r), suggesting that IL-4 might play a regulatory role in the IL-2-dependent generation of NK cells in BM.

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