Abstract

The morphology of a cloned, H-2 d-restricted, type A influenza virus-cross-reactive cytotoxic T-cell line (L4) and its interaction with histocompatible P815 and macrophage targets was studied by transmission electron microscopy. Most characteristic features of L4 cells were organelle-free, filament-rich pseudopods, by which contact was made with target cells, tightly stacked Golgi saccules near the nuclear cleft, and large (1–3 μm) multivesiculate cytoplasmic bodies of unknown function. L4 cells contacted both type A influenza virus-infected and control (uninfected or type B virus-infected) targets, but tight contact involving interdigitating pseudopodal projections was prominent only with type A virus-infected target cells. Target cell lysis was characterised by zeiosis; however, no degranulation, membrane damage, or transfer of ultrastructurally identifiable material from killers to targets was ever observed.

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