CHARACTERIZATION OF MATURATION AND FUNCTION OF NATURAL-KILLER-CELLS IN XENOGENEIC (RAT -] MOUSE) BONE-MARROW CHIMERAS - EVIDENCE THAT RAT NK CELLS ARE PRESENT AND FUNCTIONAL IN A XENOGENEIC ENVIRONMENT TRANSPLANTATION Vandenbrink, M. R., French, S. W., Beck, T. P., HRONAKES, M. L., Wren, S. M., Ildstad, S. T. 1993; 55 (2): 355-361

Abstract

Reconstitution of B10 recipient mice, conditioned with total body irradiation (950 rads), with 40 x 10(6) untreated F344 or WF rat bone marrow cells results in stable rat stem-cell engraftment with multilineage lymphohematopoietic chimerism. We have now characterized NK cell generation, maturation, and function in fully xenogeneic chimeras (WF rat-->B10 mouse; F344-->B10 mouse). Early during xenogeneic reconstitution, rat-derived NK cells predominated in splenic lymphoid tissue, composing 14-18% of total cells at week 1 and increasing to 35.6-59.9% of total cells at week 2. By week 6, levels of rat NK cells had decreased and stabilized to that expected for normal rat (9-14.2%). The NK chimerism was reliably stable for up to 7 months following reconstitution. Most importantly, rat-derived NK cells were functional in both YAC tumor cytolysis and ADCC assays, suggesting that the xenogeneic mouse host environment was sufficient to support the generation, maturation, and function of rat-derived NK cells.

View details for Web of Science ID A1993KN01500024

View details for PubMedID 8434388