Abstract
The mechanism of spontaneous cell-mediated cytotoxicity (SCMC) of cultured cell lines has been investigated and compared with antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCMC) by detailed kinetic analysis. the mechanism of SCMC resembles that of an enzyme, as does ADCMC where effector cells are analogous to an enzyme and the 51Cr-labeled target cells are analogous to the substrate. Temporal kinetic studies revealed an induction period of about 1 hr before significant 51Cr release for SCMC, but not for ADCMC. This induction period is not due to differences in effector-target affinity between SCMC and ADCMC.
On the basis of kinetic analysis it was shown that SCMC approaches simple Michaelis-Menten enzyme kinetics, allowing determination of a Michaelis constant, Km, and maximal velocity, Vmax, for the interaction between a given effector and target cell. The Km values thus determined were found to be identical for the lysis of several target cell lines of varying SCMC susceptibility to effector cells from a given donor, whereas Vmax values for lysis of different target cells varied considerably. However, effector cells isolated from the peripheral blood of different donors exhibited different Km values for the target cells tested. Moreover, the Km value obtained for ADCMC effected by a given donor's lymphocytes was found equal to the Km value obtained for SCMC by that donor.
Footnotes
This work was supported in part by United States Public Health Service Grant AI-12766 from the National Institutes of Health.