Human leukemias are illnesses of hemopoietic stem cells that go through processes of self-replication and partial differentiation under the control of as yet largely unknown growth and differentiation factors. IL-2 is a powerful factor controlling proliferation of normal T cells. We report that acute lymphoblastic leukemias of T and non-B, non-T phenotypes produce a growth factor after mitogen stimulation. This factor is able to support the proliferation of human and murine IL-2- dependent cytotoxic cells, has a mol wt of 26,000 daltons by gel filtration, an isoelectric point of 6.6, and its biologic activity is inhibited by an anti IL-2 monoclonal antibody. This factor is, therefore, by all parameters studied very similar to IL-2 produced by normal lymphocytes. A recently developed monoclonal antibody, Pan T2, binds to normal T cells, renders T cells responsive to IL-2, and induces the release of IL-2, which in turn provides the second signal for T-cell proliferation. Mononuclear cells from acute lymphoblastic leukemia do not respond to the addition of this monoclonal antibody unless cocultured with irradiated Daudi cells. Since normal T cells do not require Daudi to produce IL-2 and since Daudi cells do not produce IL-2 under any conditions, we conclude that the cell responsible for IL- 2 production in acute lymphatic leukemia is a leukemic T cell with an altered mechanism of IL-2 production at the level of the Pan T2 binding site.

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