Phenotype and function of a CD56+ peripheral blood monocyte

Abstract
G-CSF primed CD34 cells cultured for 2–3 weeks in IL-2 and stem cell factor generate CD56high cells with phenotypic and morphologic features of NK cells, and a novel adherent CD56low CD16- population expressing myeloid markers (CD33 and HLA-DR). We hypothesized that similar cells might also occur in peripheral blood. In 13/13 normal individuals, we found a circulating population of CD56low, CD33+, FcRI+, FcRII+, HLA-DR+, CD11bhigh, CD14+ monocytes closely resembling the cultured CD56lowCD33+ cells. They may represent a normal counterpart of the CD56+ CD33+ hybrid myeloid/natural killer cell leukemia. Their mean frequency was 1.31% (standard deviation), range 0.16–3.5%, of total mononuclear cells. CD56lowCD33+ cells, primed with cytomegalovirus antigen, induced autologous T-lymphocyte proliferation comparably to CD56-, CD14+ peripheral blood monocytes (PBM). Conversely, CD56low cells induced greater T-cell proliferation than CD56- PBM when lymphocyte responders were HLA mismatched. Unstimulated CD56lowCD33+ cells showed a low antiproliferative effect on K562, which was increased upon LPS stimulation. The pattern of cytokine production by CD56lowCD33+ cells and PBM largely overlapped; however, they produced detectable levels of IL-6 and IL-1. These results define a minor monocyte population with distinct phenotypic and functional features.