A COMPARISON OF T-LYMPHOCYTE RESPONSIVENESS OF MONONUCLEAR LEUKOCYTES AND WHOLE BLOOD
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Hood College Biology
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Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Cell cultures of whole blood were evaluated as a simplified
replacement for mononuclear cells in the lymphocyte proliferation assay
and the interleukin-2 bioassay. The cell cultures were stimulated with
Phytohemaggluttin, Concanavalin A or anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (OKT3)
for various times of incubation. The results were measured as Tlymphocyte
proliferation and interleukin-2 production.
In the lymphocyte proliferation assay, both diluted whole blood and
mononuclear cell cultures produced satisfactory results. Whole blood
diluted 1:8, 1:16 or 1:32 could be used as a replacement for mononuclear
cells. The optimal dilution of whole blood was shown to depend on the
stimulant used.
In the interleukin-2 assay, diluted whole blood cultures produced
higher levels of Interleukin-2 (up to 25 Units/mL) than mononuclear cell
cultures (less than 5 Units/mL). Low production of Interleukin-2 in the
mononuclear cell cultures could possibly be attributed to our modified
protocol which used human AS serum in place of the conventional fetal
bovine serum. Human AB serum does not contain the same level of foreign
antigen as fetal bovine serum, which could account for the low production
of Interleukin-2.
The recommended protocol for interleukin-2 production is whole blood
diluted 1:8 or 1:16 stimulated with Phytahemaggluttin or Concanavalin A.
Whole blood diluted 1:32 consistently showed lower interleukin-2
production than whole blood diluted 1:8 or 1:16 and is not a recommended
dilution. The low IL-2 production is probably due to a limiting number
of T-lymphocytes present at this dilution. OKT3 elicited no detectable
levels of Interleukin-2 from any of the cell cultures and is not a
recommended stimulant.
The use of whole blood as the source of T-lymphocytes is a
modification of both the lymphocyte proliferation assay and the
Interleukin-2 bioassay. It serves to eliminate the large number of
manipulation steps necessary to purify mononuclear cells from peripheral
blood. As a result, a reduced volume of blood is required and less time
and technical assistance are needed in using these assays to measure
immune competence.
