Abstract

Human peripheral Wood lymphocytes were depleted of natural killer cells cytotoxic against human fetal fibroblasts by allowing them to attack the fibroblast targets grown on plastic beads followed by gravity sedimentation under conditions in which single cells floated but the attacker cells sedimented with the carrier beads. The attacker cells could be released from the bead-grown targets and shown to be greatly enriched in natural cytotoxic activity. The effector cells depleted by fibroblast adsorption were also depleted of cytotoxic activity against other monolayer targets whereas suspension grown lymphoma and leukemia cells (MOLT-4, RAJI, and K-562) were killed as effectively as by non-depleted effector cells. In competition assays other monolayer cells inhibited the natural cytotoxicity against fetal fibroblasts but the suspension-grown cells were unable to compete. The results suggested that different effector cell populations were probably involved when monolayer vs suspension targets were used in assays for human natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity. The separation was not, however, functionally complete since in competition assays with suspension-grown target cells also monolayer cells were able to compete. Preliminary morphological characterization of the natural killer cells against fetal fibroblasts is also presented.

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