M.L. Labat , I. Florentin , M. Davigny , Y. Moricard , G. Milhaud
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引用次数: 18
Abstract
Daily administration of dichloromethylene diphosphonate (Cl2MDP) to (C57BL/6 × DBA/2) F1 hybrid mice, from twc days of age (10 mg of P/kg body weight), resulted in a marked impairment of natural killer (NK) activity of spleer cells against YAC-1 lymphoma cells. The suppressive effecl increased with the duration of the treatment. Cessation of the treatment led to a rapid recovery (in 2 weeks) of NK activity while the osteopetrosic bone lesions persisted, Thus, the loss of natural killing cannot be explained by the simple reduction of bone marrow volume secondary to Cl2MDP-induced osteopetrosis. However, as NK cells are considered to be dependent on the bone marrow because they cannot be sustained by extramedullary production, a direct effect of Cl2MDP on the generation of NK cell precursors by the bone marrow was not excluded. Cl2MDP was not directly toxic to the fully differentiated splenic NK cells, since the addition of Cl2MDP to the in vitro assay (10−5 − 10 μg/ml) did not reduce cytotoxicity.
These studies suggest that impairment of NK activity during Cl2MDP treatment may have clinical toxicologic implications since NK cells have been suggested to play an important role in natural host defenses against infection and neoplasia.