The complete amino acid sequence of the A chain of mistletoe lectin I was determined via Edman degradation sequencing of the N-terminus and tryptic and endoproteinase Asp-N overlapping fragments, amino acid analysis and MALDI-MS. The data obtained show a great homology with the chains of ribosome-inactivating proteins such as ricin and abrin with 111 (abrin-a) and 103 (ricin-D) amino acid residues conserved, respectively. The knowledge of the primary structure of MLA will have a fundamental impact on elucidating the biological function of medically applied mistletoe lectins on a molecular basis.
This report demonstrates that in vitro activation of human cells with the beta-galactoside-specific lectin from mistletoe (ML-I) or interleukin-2 (IL-2) results in different patterns of activation and function of cytotoxic cells. It is now well established that natural killer (NK) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cytotoxicity is mainly mediated by resting (NK) and IL-2-activated (LAK) CD56-positive (+) cells respectively. Culture of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) for 3 days with ML-I led to expansion and activation of T cells which demonstrated NK- and LAK-like cytotoxicity. T lymphocyte subset analysis revealed that in total PBL, ML-I preferentially stimulated and expanded CD8+ T cells which mediated the cytotoxic effect. Incubation of highly purified CD8+ T cells alone with ML-I did not lead to induction of cytotoxicity, which required the presence of both CD4+ and CD14+ (monocytes) cells, suggesting that ML-I does not exert a direct effect on CD8+ T cells. Activation of PBL with both ML-I and IL-2 resulted in simultaneous induction of T and CD56+ cell-mediated NK and LAK cytotoxicity. These data suggest that treatment with ML-I and IL-2 might provide an approach to induce maximum cytotoxicity against tumors and to recruit both T and NK cells for tumor therapy.
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