Abstract

Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is recognized as a major activating signal for human natural killer (NK) cells. The presence of monocytes alters NK cell responsiveness to IL-2. Thus, while IL-2 effectively augments NK cell cytotoxicity (NKCC) in monocyte-depleted NK effector cells, it is relatively ineffective or even suppressive for NK cells in monocyte-containing, NK-cell-enriched mononuclear cell fractions. Here we report that concomitant treatment with IL-2 and the biogenic amine histamine synergistically augmented NKCC against K562 and Daudi target cells of CD3-/CD16+ human NK cells in the presence but not in the absence of monocytes. Addition of peripheral-blood monocytes, recovered by countercurrent centrifugal elutriation, to purified NK cells abrogated IL-2 induced NK cell activation, reconstituted the synergistic, NK-activating effects of histamine and IL-2, and strongly reduced baseline NKCC. The effects of histamine on baseline NKCC and on NK cell responsiveness to IL-2 were related to counteraction of monocyte-mediated NK cell suppression. By contrast, histamine did not affect baseline or IL-2-induced NKCC in mixtures of NK cells and monocytes when the latter cells were recovered after adherence. The effect of histamine on NK cell responsiveness to IL-2 was mediated by H2-type histamine receptors, as judged by mimicry exerted by the specific H2 receptor agonist dimaprit, but not by an H2-receptor-inactive derivative of this compound, N-methyldimaprit, and blocking by the H2 receptor antagonist ranitidine. Experiments in which monocytes and nonadherent NK cells were separately pretreated with ranitidine prior to histamine treatment suggested that NK-regulatory effects of histamine were mediated by H2 receptors on monocytes. Our data suggest that histamine may provide an important signal in the regulation of NK cell responsiveness to IL-2.

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