Interleukin 1-induced, T cell-mediated regression of immunogenic murine tumors. Requirement for an adequate level of already acquired host concomitant immunity
نویسندگان
چکیده
Intraperitoneal injection of human rIL-1 in a dose of 0.5 microgram daily for 5 d, or 1 microgram daily for 3 d, was capable of causing complete regression of immunogenic SA1 sarcoma growing subcutaneously in syngeneic or semisyngeneic mice. Higher doses of IL-1 were not more therapeutic against the SA1 sarcoma, but needed to be given to cause complete regression of the immunogenic L5178Y lymphoma. On the other hand, the P815 mastocytoma was much less responsive to IL-1 therapy, in that it failed to undergo complete regression in response to doses of IL-1 capable of causing regression of the L5178Y lymphoma. IL-1 caused regression of the SA1 sarcoma when given on days 6-8 of tumor growth, but not when given on days 1-3. This refractoriness of a small tumor to IL-1 therapy suggests that the antitumor action of IL-1 is based on an underlying host-immune response that is not generated until after day 3 of tumor growth. Direct evidence for the participation of host immunity in IL-1-induced tumor regression was supplied by results showing that IL-1 was not therapeutic against the SA1 sarcoma growing in T cell-deficient (TXB) mice, unless these mice were first infused with Ly-2+ and L3T4+ T cells from donor mice bearing an established SA1 sarcoma. In contrast, normal T cells, or T cells from donor mice bearing a YAC-1 lymphoma, failed to provide TXB recipients with the ability to cause regression of their SA-1 sarcoma in response to IL-1 treatment. The results are in keeping with the interpretation that exogenous IL-1, by augmenting the production of tumor-sensitized T cells, converts a subtherapeutic level of host immunity to a therapeutic level. The results suggest, in addition, that IL-1 only stimulates the replication of T cells that are already engaged in the antitumor immune response.
منابع مشابه
The immunological basis of endotoxin-induced tumor regression. Requirement for T-cell-mediated immunity
It was shown that although intravenous administration of bacterial endotoxin caused extensive hemorrhagic necrosis of four different syngeneic murine tumors, only two of these tumors subsequently underwent complete regression: the two that were shown to be immunogeneic as classically defined. An immunologic basis for endotoxin-induced regression was further indicated by the additional findings ...
متن کاملConcomitant Tumor Immunity to a Poorly Immunogenic Melanoma Is Prevented by Regulatory T Cells
Concomitant tumor immunity describes immune responses in a host with a progressive tumor that rejects the same tumor at a remote site. In this work, concomitant tumor immunity was investigated in mice bearing poorly immunogenic B16 melanoma. Progression of B16 tumors did not spontaneously elicit concomitant immunity. However, depletion of CD4(+) T cells in tumor-bearing mice resulted in CD8(+) ...
متن کاملT-cell-mediated suppression of anti-tumor immunity. An explanation for progressive growth of an immunogenic tumor
The results of this paper are consistent with the hypothesis that progressive growth of the Meth A fibrosarcoma evokes the generation of a T-cell-mediated mechanism of immunosuppression that prevents this highly immunogenic tumor from being rejected by its immunocompetent host. It was shown that it is possible to cause the regression of large, established Meth A tumors by intravenous infusion o...
متن کاملRadiation-induced, Immunologically Mediated Regression of an Established Tumor as an Example of Successful Therapeutic Immunomanipulation
It was shown several years ago by Hellstrom et al . (1) that sublethal x irradiation of mice bearing palpable syngeneic tumors can result in partial or complete tumor regression . These same authors showed, in addition, that the therapeutic effect of irradiation depended on the tumors being above a certain size, and that regression failed to occur if the mice were infused, immediately after irr...
متن کامل1450 Cytolytic T Cells in Adoptive Tumor Immunotherapy
Recent publications from this laboratory (1, 2) have shown that it is possible to cause the regression of established immunogenic murine tumors by the passive transfer of tumor-sensitized T cells from immunized donors, provided the tumor-bearing recipients have been made T cell-deficient by thymectomy and irradiation. The need for T cell-deficient tumor-bearing recipients to demonstrate success...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید
ثبت ناماگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید
ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- The Journal of Experimental Medicine
دوره 168 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1988