Abstract

Human peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) phenotypes have been analyzed before and after stimulation with phytohemagglutinin (PHA), concanavalin A (ConA) and pokeweed mitogen (PWM) for 3 days and in mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) for 7 days. PBL labeled with each of 10 fluorescent monoclonal antibodies were automatically sampled for flow cytometry from 96-well microtiter plates using a microsample delivery system. The reference phenotypic ranges were determined in fresh cells and control cultures. PHA was mostly mitogenic for T PBL bearing the CD3, CD5, CD7, CD8 and CD25 differentiation clusters, and a low density of CD1 and CD4 had a small effect on human natural killer cells (HNK) and also did not stimulate B (CD19) and HLA-DR+ PBL. There was an incomplete phenotypic overlapping between PHA- and ConA-stimulated cultures, ConA being more mitogenic for CD4 and less mitogenic for CD8 PBL. The mitogenic effect of PWM was evident on CD3, CD5, CD7, CD4, CD25 and CD8, but not on HNK, HLA-DR and CD19 B PBL, which presumably had already differentiated into antibody-secreting cells. After MLC stimulation all T, B and HNK PBL subsets tested were increased, but the cells bearing CD1, CD4, CD5, CD7, CD25, HNK, CD19 and HLA-DR had the greatest proliferation with respect to the unmixed control PBL. The present approach to the phenotyping of PBL subsets could offer more complete and accurate data for monitoring and follow-up of patients in transplantation and immunopathology hospital wards.

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