Abstract

A simple and reliable three-step procedure to enrich for murine endogenous splenic NK cells is described. The method is based on the sequential elimination of non-NK cell subsets by standard and inexpensive techniques executed in a specific order. First, macrophages and other adherent cells are eliminated by incubation on plastic surface. Secondly, the T cells are excluded from the multicellular aggregates formed by agglutination of the remaining cells with wheat germ lectin. Thirdly, after dissociation of the aggregates with N- acetyl- D-glucosamine and osmotic lysis of erythrocytes, NK cells are separated from other nucleated cells by nylon wool filtration. C57BL/6 spleen cells were used to establish the enrichment procedure. Usually their NK cell activity is intermediate but occasionally either low or high NK cell activity was observed in input cell suspensions. The NK cell activity recovery and the degree of enrichment varied inversely with the initial NK cell activity level of the input cell suspension. When initial NK cell activity was intermediate, it was enriched 10–30-fold. Experiments were done to establish if suppressor cells, and nylon wool-adherent, naturally activated NK cells, putatively present in input cells, could have been responsible for the abnormal initial NK cell activity detected in some C57BL/6 spleen cell suspensions and for the variations in the degree of enrichment achieved by the method here described. Either no or negligeable suppressor cell activity was noted in the cell fractions normally discarded at each step of the procedure. On the other hand, nylon wool-adherent NK cells were eliminated during the fractionation of spleen cells with higher than average initial NK cell activity and would account for the lower NK cell enrichment obtained in these conditions.

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