| Literature DB >> 27888293 |
Ji Sung Kim1, Yong Guk Kim1, Hong Kyung Lee1, Eun Jae Park1, Boyeong Kim1, Jong Soon Kang2, Heesoon Lee1, Youngsoo Kim1, Jin Tae Hong1, Sang-Bae Han3.
Abstract
Cytotoxicity of cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cells depends mainly on their encounters with target cells, but how many CIK cells are required to kill an individual cancer cell is unknown. Here we used time-lapse imaging to quantify the critical effector cell number required to kill an individual target cell. CIK cells killed MHC-I-negative and MHC-I-positive cancer cells, but natural killer (NK) cells destroyed MHC-I-negative cells only. The average threshold number of CIK cells required to kill an individual cancer cell was 6.7 for MHC-I-negative cells and 6.9 for MHC-I-positive cells. That of NK cells was 2.4 for MHC-I-negative cells. Likely due to the higher threshold numbers, killing by CIK cells was delayed in comparison with NK cells: 40% of MHC-negative target cells were killed after 5 h when co-cultured with CIK cells and after 2 h with NK cells. Our data have implications for the rational design of CIK cell-based immunotherapy of cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cytotoxicity; Natural killer cells; Threshold number; Time-lapse imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27888293 DOI: 10.1007/s00262-016-1934-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Immunother ISSN: 0340-7004 Impact factor: 6.968