SUMMARY
Morphological and phenotypic characterization in previous studies has indicated that intermediate (int) T-cell receptor (TCR) cells or T natural killer (T NK ) cells may stand at an intermediate position betweenNK cells and high TCR cells of thymic origin in phylogenetic development. In this study, a functional study on cytotoxic activity against various tumour targets was performed in each purified subset. When a negative selection method entailing in vivo injection of anti-asialo GM 1 antibody or anti-interleukin (IL)-2Rb monoclonal antibody (mAb) was applied, IL-2Rb CD3 ÿ NK cells were found to have the highest NK activity while IL-2Rb int CD3 (or TCR) cells had a lower level of the NK activity. High CD3 cells (freshly isolated) did not have any such activity. Sorting experiments further revealed that the NK function mediated by int CD3 cells was augmented when they were exposed to anti-CD3 mAb, antiTCRab, or anti-TCRgd mAb. This phenomenon was not observed in NK cells and high CD3 cells. More importantly, when anti-CD3 mAb (or anti-TCR mAb) was added to the assay culture, int CD3 cells became cytotoxic against even NK-resistant tumour (FcgR ÿ , Fas ) targets. Liver mononuclear cells or int CD3 cells exposed to anti-CD3 mAb for 6 hr showed an elevated level of perforin in their cytoplasms. The present results suggest that int CD3 cells are usually non-cytotoxic against various tumours but become functional after being stimulated via the TCR-CD3 complex.
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