Expansion of Functional NK Cells in Multiple Tissue Compartments of Mice Treated with Flt3-Ligand: Implications for Anti-Cancer and Anti-Viral Therapy

  • Shaw S
  • Maung A
  • Steptoe R
  • et al.
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Abstract

The generation and activity of NK cells appear to be regulated by a particular set of cytokines. We examined the in vivo effects of recombinant human Flt3 ligand (Flt3-L), a recently cloned potent hemopoietic cytokine, on NK cell development in mice. Daily i.p. administration of Flt3-L consistently induced striking increases in both the absolute number and the total cytotoxic activity of mature nonactivated NK cells within various tissues. Dose- and time-dependent increases were observed in the bone marrow (∼2- and ∼11-fold, respectively), thymus (∼2.8- and ∼2.0-fold), blood (∼11- and ∼15-fold), spleen (∼10- and ∼9-fold), and liver (∼15- and ∼39-fold). In addition, IL-2 induced a rapid increase in NK activity, NK cell proliferative responses, generation of lymphokine-activated killer activity, and development of activated adherent NK cells, which were all significantly increased by Flt3-L treatment. Thus, in addition to its recently reported capacity to stimulate dendritic cell production, Flt3-L has a prominent biologic role in NK cell generation in vivo. This is probably a result of selectively induced expansion of NK cell progenitors (pro-NK cells), because Flt3-L stimulates in vitro proliferation of pro-NK cells without affecting the cytotoxicity of mature NK cells. The results also indicate that either alone or in combination with a potent activator of NK cells, such as IL-2, Flt3-L could be used to markedly augment the number and activity of NK cells, especially in the liver. Flt3-L appears to have considerable potential for therapy of both cancer and viral infection.

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Shaw, S. G., Maung, A. A., Steptoe, R. J., Thomson, A. W., & Vujanovic3, N. L. (1998). Expansion of Functional NK Cells in Multiple Tissue Compartments of Mice Treated with Flt3-Ligand: Implications for Anti-Cancer and Anti-Viral Therapy. The Journal of Immunology, 161(6), 2817–2824. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.161.6.2817

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