Abstract

Abstract The kinetics and rate of T cell-mediated cytolysis was assessed by measuring the times required for lysis of isolated target cells by single cytotoxic lymphocytes. Single target cell lysis was determined microscopically by observing trypan blue uptake as a function of time of incubation of effector-target conjugates in agarose. Lysis of EL-4 target cells by alloimmune peritoneal exudate lymphocytes was initiated without a lag and was essentially complete at 2 hr. Both zero-order and first-order kinetics equations were analyzed for fit to the 0 to 2 hr lysis values. Statistically, the zero-order kinetic function could be rejected (p > 0.05), but the first-order kinetics function (p < 0.01) could not. This strong evidence for first-order kinetics of T cell-mediated cytolysis implies that within each CTL-target cell population, cytolysis occurs exponentially as a random decay process and that one event in the entire process of cytolysis is rate limiting. The first-order equation was then applied to measurements of the rate of cytolysis in many different individual effector-target cell combinations. Significant differences in the lytic rate were apparent when either the effector or target cells were varied, with the rate constants spanning a 5-fold range. The heterogeneity of lytic rates is consistent with the hypothesis that lytic efficiency is a function of both the effector and target cells used.

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