Abstract
To determine the growth properties of B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B CLL) and to identify possible abnormalities thereof, we examined the in vitro action of interleukin 2 (IL2) in four patients. Using radiolabeled IL2 and monoclonal antibodies reactive with IL2 membrane receptors we show that CLL cells, after their activation in vitro, express IL2 receptors of a high- as well as a low-affinity type, exactly as has been reported for normal T and B blasts. In three of the four reported cases, CLL proliferation (measured with 3H-thymidine incorporation) depended on the addition of phytohemagglutinin (PHA) to activate the cells and IL2 (optimal concentration, 10 to 100 U IL2/mL). In contrast, the cells of the fourth case of CLL (CLL-4) proliferated in an autonomous fashion, ie, without a need for PHA and IL2 in culture. Specific blocking of the IL2-binding sites with anti-IL2 receptor monoclonal antibodies almost completely inhibited the proliferation of these cells, which indicated that functional IL2 receptors were required for the autonomous proliferation. The demonstration of low concentrations of IL2 activity in the culture medium conditioned by the cells suggests that endogenous IL2 had been responsible for the spontaneous 3H-thymidine uptake by the CLL cells of patient 4. However, we were unable to extract IL2 mRNA from the cells (neither fresh nor after various in vitro incubations) in quantities detectable by Northern blot analysis that would prove that the CLL cells of patient 4 were actively synthesizing IL2 during culture. Thus, individual cases of B CLL are subject to variable growth regulation involving functional IL2 receptors on the cell surface: after activation with PHA the cells respond to exogenous IL2 in a fashion similar to normal B lymphocytes, or the cells are stimulated by endogenous IL2 (or an IL2-like activity) and do not require activation with PHA.