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Effect of anti-lymphotoxin on cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Evidence for two pathways, one involving lymphotoxin and the other requiring intimate contact between the plasma membranes of killer and target cells.
Authors:M K Gately  M M Mayer  C S Henney
Affiliation:Departments of Microbiology and Medicine of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the O''Neill Memorial Research Laboratories of the Good Samaritan Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland 21239 U.S.A.
Abstract:A rabbit anti-lymphotoxin serum produced against partially purified, antigeninduced, guinea pig lymphotoxin, was used to study the role of lymphotoxin in lymphocyte-mediated cytotoxicity in vitro. The anti-lymphotoxin serum inhibited cytolysis resulting from incubation of ovalbumin-immune guinea pig spleen cells with either mouse (P815 mastocytoma) or guinea pig (line 10 hepatoma) target cells in the presence of soluble ovalbumin. The antiserum also inhibited the cytolysis of ovalbumin-coupled target cells by ovalbumin-immune guinea pig spleen cells. In contrast, the anti-lymphotoxin serum did not inhibit: (a) the lysis of line 10 (strain 2) hepatoma cells by spleen cells from alloimmunized Hartley or strain 13 animals; (b) the lysis of line 10 hepatoma cells by spleen cells from tumor-bearing syngeneic animals; or (c) the lysis of P815-mastocytoma cells by spleen cells from P815-immune guinea pigs. These results support the hypothesis that there are at least two distinct pathways by which immune lymphocytes can destroy target cells in vitro, one which involves secretion of a nonspecific soluble factor, i.e., lymphotoxin, and another which probably requires intimate contact between the plasma membranes of the target and killer cells.
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