Abstract
Natural killer activity of mouse spleen cells toward a human myeloid leukemia cell line, K562, can be enhanced by alloantisera directed against individual antigens in the H-2 region. By using a panel of 13 antisera (8 directed against antigens in the K and D regions and 5 directed against antigens in the I region) and four strains of mice (C57BL/6J, CBA, DBA/2, and A/J) it was found that certain antisera would stimulate target cell lysis by spleen cells only if the antisera had specificity for antigens which were a part of the haplotype represented on the spleen NK effector cells. Anti Ia antisera could stimulate the anti K562 NK activity of nude mouse spleen cells which lack mature T cells. Depletion of B cells and macrophages from nude spleen cells, by passing through a nylon-wool column also did not abolish the effect of anti-Ia antiserum. It appears likely therefore that the anti-Ia antibodies exert this effect directly on NK cells and that Ia antigens may be expressed on NK cells. Since the antisera directed against different antigens in H-2 complex irrespective of subregion specificity (K, D, or I) stimulated the NK activity of mouse spleen cells, the phenomenon offered an interesting method for testing the presence of a given alloantigen on mouse spleen cells. Log-dose response curves for the augmentation of lysis induced by appropriate alloantisera were linear over a dilution range of 1:320 to 1:5120. By using the dose-response curves, potency ratios of two preparations of antisera (directed against antigen 33 of the K region) could be successfully determined. Besides the K562 cell line, many human lymphoblastoid cell lines could also be used as target cells in this assay system.
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