Abstract

In this study, we examined the effects of peripheral blood T lymphocytes from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) on marrow-derived erythroid progenitors (BFU-DE and CFU-DE) growth in an in vivo culture by using the plasma clot diffusion chamber (DC) technique. The application of double-compartment chambers (each compartment separated by a membrane filter) makes the investigations of humoral effects of T lymphocytes upon marrow erythroid progenitors proliferation possible. T lymphocytes of AML-patients in the absence of a statistically significant number of monocytes suppressed the growth of BFU-DE and CF-UDE from T lymphocyte- and adherent cell-depleted marrows. The inhibition ability was restricted to the CD4-positive enriched fraction obtained from T cells by using the negative selection technique. In contrast, the CD8-positive enriched fraction had no effect on erythroid colony formation. Autologous and allogeneic BFU-DE and CFU-DE were similarly affected by the CD4-positive T cells. Treatment of T cells with monoclonal antibodies against HLA-DR before cocultures, completely abrogated the suppression of BFU-DE and CFU-DE-derived colony formation. Suppressive activity detected in the CD4-positive T cells was also totally abolished by treatment with anti-interferon-γ antibodies; whereas the inhibition was retained after 30 Gy radiation. Under these experimental conditions, resting T lymphocytes from healthy subjects did not affect the erythroid colony formation. Our data show that in AML-patients, a circulating HLA-DR-positive, less radiosensitive subset within the CD4-positive T cells is capable of inducing an interferon-γ-mediated suppression of erythropoiesis, at least in DC culture.

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