A. Chakraborty et al., PROLACTIN RESPONSE OF NK CELLS, BUT NOT OF LAK CELLS, IS DEFICIENT INPATIENTS WITH CARCINOMA OF ORAL CAVITY AND DURING AGING, International journal of cancer, 66(1), 1996, pp. 65-69
The regulatory role of prolactin (Prl) on peripheral blood natural kil
ler (NK) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) tell activities was stu
died in young (mean age, 40 years) and elderly (mean age, 68 years) he
althy men and patients with carcinoma of the oral cavity (oral cancer)
. The peripheral blood NK cells, but not the LAK cells, were found to
be depressed in oral cancer patients compared with age-matched healthy
men. However, age-associated deficiency in both NK and LAK cell activ
ity was observed in healthy men and cancer patients. Prl produced dose
-dependent inhibition (1, 10, 100 or 250 ng/ml) or stimulation (25-50
ng/ml) of resting NK cells in young groups of healthy men and cancer p
atients. In elderly groups less or no response of the NK cells to low
doses of Prl (1-10 ng/ml) was evident. The NK cells of young and elder
ly healthy men were stimulated by human recombinant Interleukin-2 (rlL
-2) (100 U/ml), and Prl (1-250 ng/ml) inhibited these cells. In oral c
ancer patients an altered response to low doses of Prl (1-50 ng/ml) wa
s observed in IL-2-stimulated NK cells, which also revealed malignancy
-associated loss of IL-2 response. In contrast, there was no malignanc
y or age-associated change in Prl response of the LAK cells. Treatment
of peripheral blood lymphocytes of both healthy men and oral cancer p
atients for 5 days with Prl (50 ng/ml) in the presence of low concentr
ation of serum generated LAK cells. (C) 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.