Characterization of an antigen expressed by human natural killer cells.

Abstract
A monoclonal antibody, anti-N901, was produced by fusing NS-1 myeloma cells with spleen cells of a mouse immunized with human CML cells. This antibody was reactive with a subpopulation of peripheral blood LGL, including the natural killer cells. Monocytes, granulocytes, B cells, T cells (T3+ cells), erythrocytes, and platelets were nonreactive. The N901-positive cells in the peripheral blood were heterogeneous with respect to expression of other cell surface antigens. The majority of N901+ cells co-expressed T11, Mo1, and HNK-1, whereas a smaller percentage expressed T8. Ia, T3, T4, Mo2, or B1 antigens were very uncommon on N901+ cells. The heterogeneity of the N901+ LGL was further investigated by examining the expression of N901 antigen on a series of cloned normal human NK cell lines. N901 antigen was expressed by each of the NK cell lines tested, and by a minority of cloned T cell lines without NK activity. Anti-N901 does not block NK activity and can be used to rapidly purify functional NK cells for further study.