The susceptibility of cytotoxic effector lymphocytes and their induction to in vivo or in vitro treatment with rabbit anti-neutral glycolipid ganglio-N-tetraosylceramide (anti-ASGM1) antiserum was investigated. Intravenous injection of anti-ASGM1 antiserum eliminated measurable natural killer (NK) cell activity in spleen cells of mice infected for 5 days with Vaccinia virus, or for 8 days with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) if injected 24 hr prior to testing. In addition, this treatment lowered measurable virus-specific cytotoxic T cell activity by 60 to 95%. Virus-specific cytotoxic T cell and NK cell activity generated during a primary infection in vivo was also sensitive to treatment in vitro with anti-ASGM1 antiserum (1/300 to 1/600 dilution) plus rabbit complement at a dilution of 1/15 (20 to 50% cell death, more than 30-fold decrease of cytotoxic activity); in vitro treatment with rabbit complement alone often enhanced NK and cytotoxic T cell activity slightly. In vivo treatment with anti-ASGM1 before primary immunization decreased generation of primary CTL only if high doses of anti-ASGM1 antiserum were injected twice. Antiviral T cells generated during secondary stimulation in vitro and alloreactive cytotoxic T cells from a mixed lymphocyte culture were resistant to treatment in vitro with anti-ASGM1 plus complement at the end of the culture period. Treatment in vitro of in vivo-primed responder spleen cells with anti-ASGM1 plus complement before their addition to a secondary restimulation culture resulted in complete inhibition of a secondary antiviral cytotoxic T cell response. In vivo treatment with anti-ASGM1 24 hr before their spleen cells were harvested and restimulated in vitro significantly reduced the virus-specific T cell activity of mice that had been immunized with virus several weeks previously. A cloned T cell line exclusively exerting NK-like activity was resistant, and two cloned virus-specific cytotoxic T cell lines were susceptible to treatment with anti-ASGM1 plus complement in vitro. These results caution the general use of rabbit anti-ASGM1 as a marker to distinguish NK from CTL cells; they indicate a possible relationship between NK and CTL cells and suggest that in vitro culture of lymphocytes may alter or select the cell surface expression or availability of the ASGM1 marker(s).
CITATION STYLE
Stitz, L., Baenziger, J., Pircher, H., Hengartner, H., & Zinkernagel, R. M. (1986). Effect of rabbit anti-asialo GM1 treatment in vivo or with anti-asialo GM1 plus complement in vitro on cytotoxic T cell activities. The Journal of Immunology, 136(12), 4674–4680. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.136.12.4674
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