INVITRO-PROPAGATION AND CLONING OF MURINE NATURAL SUPPRESSOR (NS) CELLS JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY HERTELWULFF, B., Okada, S., Oseroff, A., Strober, S. 1984; 133 (5): 2791-2796

Abstract

During a short period of time after birth or after radiotherapy, the spleens of neonatal and adult TLI-treated mice contain suppressor cells of the mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR) and of graft-vs-host disease. The present report shows that the MLR suppressive activity of spleen cells from TLI-treated adult BALB/c mice can be maintained in long-term tissue culture by using conditioned medium. The suppressor cells can be cloned by limiting dilution, and reproducibly inhibit the [3H]TdR incorporation in the MLR at responder-to-suppressor cell ratios of 50:1. There is no antigen specificity or H-2 haplo-type restriction of the MLR suppression. The suppressor cells do not inhibit [3H]TdR per se, because no inhibition was observed in co-culture experiments with the EL4 tumor line or the IL 2-dependent HT-2 cell line. By using immunofluorescent staining techniques, the surface phenotype of the suppressor cells was found to be similar to that reported previously for cloned NK cells (Thy-1+, Lyt-1-, Lyt-2-, Ig-, Ia-, MAC-1-, asialo-GM1+). However, the suppressor lines showed no natural killer activity when YAC-1 target cells were used. Thus, the suppressor lines have been termed "natural suppressor" cells to indicate surface marker similarities to NK cells, both in vivo and in vitro, but different effector functions.

View details for Web of Science ID A1984TP18300085

View details for PubMedID 6237156