Abstract

Lactoferrin is an iron-binding glycoprotein implicated in particular in the control of immune functions and cell proliferation. We have investigated its involvement, at inflammatory concentrations, in cancer progression. We report that lactoferrin has a significant effect on natural killer (NK) cell cytotoxicity against haematopoietic and breast epithelial cell lines. Lactoferrin increases cytolysis at a low concentration (10 μg/ml) while at a high concentration (100 μg/ml) it modulates cytolysis depending on the target cell phenotype. By pre-treatment of either NK cells or target cells with lactoferrin, we have demonstrated that the lactoferrin effect is due both to a modulation of NK cell cytotoxicity and the target cell sensitivity to lysis. Lactoferrin binds to 91% of the naturally heterogeneous CD56 dim/bright NK cell population and increases the NK cell cytotoxic activity at low concentrations. High concentrations of lactoferrin seem to be toxic for the CD56 bright NK cells and decrease NK cell cytotoxicity. Lactoferrin also exerts an effect on target cells depending on the cell phenotype. It does not modify the susceptibility to lysis of haematopoietic cells such as Jurkat and K-562 cells, but does significantly increase that of the breast and colon epithelial cells. We have also demonstrated that lactoferrin inhibits epithelial cell proliferation by blocking the cell cycle progression.

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