Impaired natural killer cell activity in Bloom's syndrome could be restored by human recombinant IL-2 in vitro.

1985 
Abstract Natural killer (NK) activity against K562 tumor cells was evaluated in peripheral blood nonadherent mononuclear cells (PBMNC) obtained from four patients with Bloom's syndrome. NK activity of PBMNC from all patients was found to be depressed to less than half of age-matched control values. However, all patients showed the normal percentages of large granular lymphocytes and of cells expressing the NK-cell-associated determinants (OKM1, Leu-7, and Leu-11). Although recombinant interferon-β or -γ augmented NK activity of patients' PBMNC in a manner similar to their effects on NK activity of normal individuals, impaired NK activity of PBMNC from Bloom's patients could be restored to normal ranges only by recombinant interleukin 2 (IL-2). These results suggested that IL-2 and interferons might participate in boosting NK activity of Bloom's syndrome in different ways.
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