Natural Killer Cells and Cytotoxic T Cells Induce DNA Fragmentation in Both Human and Murine Target Cells in Vitro

1989 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. LIU ◽  
A. MULLBACHER ◽  
P. WARING
2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pratya Phetkate ◽  
Tanawan Kummalue ◽  
Yaowalak U-pratya ◽  
Somboon Kietinun

Background. Searching for drugs or herbal formulations to improve the immunity of HIV/AIDS positive people is an important issue for researchers in this field. Triphala, a Thai herbal formulation, is reported to have immunomodulatory effects in mice. However, it has not yet been investigated for immunostimulatory and side effects in healthy human volunteers.Objective. To evaluate the immunostimulatory and side effects of Triphala in a clinical phase I study.Materials and Methods. All volunteers took Triphala, 3 capsules per day for 2 weeks. Complete physical examination, routine laboratory analysis, and immunological studies were performed before ingestion and after initial meeting for 4 consecutive weeks.Results. We found that Triphala demonstrated significant immunostimulatory effects on cytotoxic T cells (CD3−CD8+) and natural killer cells (CD16+CD56+). Both of them increased significantly when compared with those of the control samples. However, no significant change in cytokine secretion was detected. All volunteers were healthy and showed no adverse effects throughout the duration of the study.Conclusion. Triphala has significant immunostimulatory effects on cellular immune response, especially cytotoxic T cells and natural killer cells. Increases in the absolute number of these cells may provide a novel adjuvant therapy for HIV/AIDS positive people in terms of immunological improvement.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaoyao Shi ◽  
Katarzyna Tomczak ◽  
June Li ◽  
Joshua K. Ochieng ◽  
Younghee Lee ◽  
...  

Checkpoint inhibitors are widely used immunotherapies for advanced cancer. Nonetheless, checkpoint inhibitors have a relatively low response rate, work in a limited range of cancers, and have some unignorable side effects. Checkpoint inhibitors aim to reinvigorate exhausted or suppressed T cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME). However, the TME contains various other immune cell subsets that interact to determine the fate of cytotoxic T cells. Activation of cytotoxic T cells is initiated by antigen cross-presentation of dendritic cells. Dendritic cells could also release chemokines and cytokines to recruit and foster T cells. B cells, another type of antigen-presenting cell, also foster T cells and can produce tumor-specific antibodies. Neutrophils, a granulocyte cell subset in the TME, impede the proliferation and activation of T cells. The TME also consists of cytotoxic innate natural killer cells, which kill tumor cells efficiently. Natural killer cells can eradicate major histocompatibility complex I-negative tumor cells, which escape cytotoxic T cell–mediated destruction. A thorough understanding of the immune mechanism of the TME, as reviewed here, will lead to further development of more powerful therapeutic strategies. We have also reviewed the clinical outcomes of patients treated with drugs targeting these immune cells to identify strategies for improvement and possible immunotherapy combinations.


1986 ◽  
Vol 163 (4) ◽  
pp. 1012-1017 ◽  
Author(s):  
P D Shah ◽  
J Keij ◽  
S M Gilbertson ◽  
D A Rowley

Cells enriched for NK activity (poly I:C induced, x-ray resistant, and nonadherent), include two phenotypically and functionally different populations. Both populations of NK cells are AGM1+, Ly-1.1-, Ly-2.1-, Ia-, and have the morphology of large granular lymphocytes. One population, however, is Thy-1+ while the second population is Thy-1-. Thy-1+ NK cells lyse YAC-1 and P815 target cells; Thy-1- NK cells lyse YAC-1 but not P815 target cells. The FACS was used to obtain homogeneous populations of Thy-1+ and Thy-1- NK cells, which retain high cytotoxicity. While Thy-1- NK cells suppress the antibody response in vitro by suppressing or eliminating DC, Thy-1+ NK cells do not suppress antibody responses in vitro.


Blood ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 101 (11) ◽  
pp. 4313-4321 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damien Reynaud ◽  
Nathalie Lefort ◽  
Elodie Manie ◽  
Laure Coulombel ◽  
Yves Levy

Abstract In this study we report the molecular and functional characterization of very early interleukin 7 receptor α (IL-7Rα)+-CD79a+CD19– B-cell progenitors, produced by human CD34+CD19–CD10– cord blood cells grown in the presence of stromal cells and cytokines. Purified IL-7Rα+CD79a+CD19– cells transcribed the B-lymphoid specific genes E2A, EBF, TdT, Rag-1, had initiated DJH rearrangements, but almost lacked Pax-5 mRNA. When exposed to appropriate environmental conditions, these cells repressed B-cell genes and completely differentiated into CD14+ macrophages, CD56+ natural killer cells, and CD4high T cells. Retention of the DJH rearranged genes in both CD14+ and CD56+ cells unambiguously demonstrates that early B-cell genes, expressed prior to Pax-5, can be activated in a multipotent human progenitor cell whose final fate, including in non-B lineages, is determined by external signals.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 3085-3085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaya Chu ◽  
Fangyu Lee ◽  
Janet Ayello ◽  
Brian Hang ◽  
Melanie Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: The outcome for children with Burkitt lymphoma (BL)has improved significantly but for patients who relapse, the prognosis is dismal due to chemo-immunotherapy resistance (Cairo et al, JCO, 2012, Cairo et al, Blood, 2007). NK cells are bone marrow-derived cytotoxic lymphocytes that play a major role in the rejection of tumors. A variety of activating and inhibitory receptors on the NK cell surface are engaged to regulate NK cell activities and to discriminate target cells from other healthy 'self' cells. However, NK therapy is limited by several factors, including small numbers of active NK cells in unmodified peripheral blood, lack of tumor targeting specificity, and multiple mechanisms of tumor escape of NK cell immunosurveillance. Our group has successfully modified expanded peripheral blood Natural Killer cells (exPBNK) with an anti-CD20 CAR to target rituximab sensitive/resistant CD20+ BL cells in vitro and in NSG mice (Chu/Cairo, et al, Can Imm Res 2015). However, the short lifespan/persistence of adoptively transferred NK cells has limited the therapeutic efficacy. ALT-803 (Altor BioScience Corporation) is a superagonist of an IL-15 variant bound to an IL-15Rα-Fc fusion with enhanced IL-15 biological activity (Zhu et al. 2009 J Immunol), longer half-life and increased potency (Han, et al. Cytokine. 2011). It is currently in several clinical trials in patients with variety of cancers such as refractory indolent non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NCT02384954). Objective: We hypothesize that ALT-803, IL-15 superagonist complex, promotes exPBNK persistence and significantly enhances the cytotoxicity of anti-CD20 CAR exPBNK against CD20+ BL. Method: PBMCs were expanded with lethally irradiated K562-mbIL21-41BBL cells (Dean Lee et al, PLoS One, 2012). CD56+ CD3- exPBNK cells were isolated using Miltenyi NK cell isolation kit. Anti-CD20-4-1BB-CD3 ζ mRNA (CAR mRNA) was producedin vitro and nucleofected into exPBNK as we have previously described (Chu/Cairo, et al, Can Imm Res 2015). ALT-803 was provided by Altor BioScience Corporation. ExPBNK cells were cultured with 0.35ng/ml or 3.5ng/ml ALT-803. NK proliferation was monitored with MTS assays. NK receptors expression and cytotoxicity were examined by flow cytometry (Chu/Cairo, et al, ASH 2014). NK resistant BL cells Raji and Daudi were used as target cells. Results: % CD56+ CD3- PBNK cells were significantly increased compared to media alone at day 14 (mean 81.85% vs 14.91%, n=3, p<0.001) when co-cultured with the irradiated feeder cell K562-mbIL21-41BBL. The absolute NK numbers were enhanced with irradiated K562-mbIL21-41BBL cells as feeders compared to IL-2 alone after normalized to the INPUT NK cell numbers (mean 2247 fold±293.7 vs 0.516 fold±0.225, n=3, p<0.001) at day 14. Different doses of ALT-803 or IgG were added to the culture medium of purified expanded exPBNK. Proliferation assays were performed at day 3, 7,11, and 17. ALT-803 significantly promoted exPBNK proliferation and persistence compared to IgG in vitro in a dose-dependent manner (A490 reading at 3.5ng/ml dose: ALT803 vs IgG=0.3383+0.009 vs 0.0987+0.0007, P<0.0001 at d17). And ALT-803 significantly enhanced exPBNK cytotoxicity against NK resistant BL cells: Raji (ALT803 vs IgG= 49.54%+2.7% vs 5.99+0.34%, p<0.001, E:T=10:1) and Daudi (ALT803 vs IgG= 63.73%+3.09% vs 2.58+1.96%, p<0.001, E:T=10:1). It also maintained the highcytoxicity of exPBNK at d4, d10 and d18 against Raji (E:T=10:1, d4 vs d10 vs d18=62.07% vs 49.54% vs 61.47%) and against Daudi (E:T=10:1, d4 vs d10 vs d18=76.02% vs 63.73% vs 55%) by maintaining the activating receptors expression such as NKp30, NKp44, and NKp46. Further-more, we demonstrated ALT-803 significantly enhanced the cytotoxicity of anti-CD20 CAR modified exPBNK against Raji (CAR vs MOCK= 81.19%+0.35% vs 66.19+0.94%, p<0.001, E:T=10:1) and Daudi (CAR vs MOCK= 91.41%+0.45% vs 80.56+1.07%, p<0.001, E:T=10:1) compared to mock modified exPBNK. ALT-803 also significantly enhanced the cytotoxicity of anti-CD20 CAR modified exPBNK against NK resistant BL cells: Raji and Daudi compared to anti-CD20 CAR modified exPBNK maintained in medium without ALT803 (Fig.1). Conclusions: ALT-803 maintained the cytotoxicity of exPBNK and in vitro persistence and significantly enhanced anti-CD20 CAR exPBNK cytotoxicity against pediatric NK resistant BL. The in vivo effect of ALT-803 on CAR exPBNK using humanized NSG models is under investigation. Disclosures Wong: Altor BioScience Corporation: Employment, Other: stockholder of Altor Bioscience Corporation. Lee:Intrexon, Ziopharm, Cyto-Sen: Equity Ownership.


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