An analysis of the sensitivity of somatic cell hybrids to natural killer cell- and natural cytotoxic cell-mediated lysis.

Abstract
The analysis of the NK and NC sensitivity of somatic cell hybrids formed between parental cell lines that differ in their NK and NC sensitivity has shown the following. 1) The dominant expression of both NK and NC recognition determinants on target cells; 2) the dominant expression of two post-recognitive NC resistance mechanisms, one requiring protein synthesis and one being protein synthesis independent; and 3) the dominant expression of a post-recognitive NK resistance mechanism, which is protein synthesis independent. The post-recognitive protein synthesis-independent NC resistance mechanism confers no NK resistance and the post-recognitive NK resistance mechanism confers no NC resistance. Whether the post-recognitive protein synthesis-dependent NC resistance mechanism confers NK resistance remains open to question. The analysis of the hybrids indicates that transformed cells become sensitive to either NK- or NC-mediated lysis by losing their resistance to the lytic activity of these effector cells, and it appears that differentiation plays a role in determining whether NK or NC resistance will be lost upon transformation. A model is proposed in which the differentiation into a fibroblast associates the loss of NC resistance with transformation, whereas the differentiation into a lymphocyte associates the loss of NK resistance with transformation. Because the loss of NK resistance is not associated with the transformation of fibroblasts, they remain NK resistant, and because the transformation of lymphocytes is not associated with the loss of NC resistance, they remain NC resistant. This provides the basis for the target specificity exhibited by NK and NC effectors.