In vivo administration of low-dose human interleukin-2 induces lymphokine-activated killer cells for enhanced cytolysis in vitro.

1991 
Abstract We have examined the effect of the intradermal administration of IL-2 on the generation of natural killer (NK) cell and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell activity. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained from borderline lepromatous (BL) and lepromatous leprosy (LL) patients and normal volunteers prior to and after IL-2 injection were stimulated in vitro with IL-2 and their cytolytic activities compared against 51 Cr labeled target K562 cells, Daudi cells, and monocytes. Before IL-2 administration, PBMC obtained from BL/LL patients and normal volunteers possessed similar levels of NK cell activity indicating that the NK cell activity of the BL/LL patients was intact. LAK cell activity was induced with IL-2 in vitro in both BL/LL patients and in normal volunteers. The level of LAK cell activity in BL/LL patients was, however, suboptimal. A single intradermal dose of 25 μg IL-2 had no effect on the phenotype of circulating mononuclear cells in either patients or normal volunteers. However, 6–12 days after IL-2 injection and subsequent restimulation of the PBMC with IL-2 in vitro , cytolytic activity of LAK cells obtained from the BL/LL patients was enhanced while cells from normal volunteers expressed the same high levels of activity as observed before IL-2 injection.
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