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1.
In the present study we establish an assay system of tumor growth inhibition with the use of a diffusion chamber and investigate the mechanism by which tumor-specific Lyt-1+2-T cells exhibit their inhibiting effect on tumor cell growth. When a diffusion chamber containing X5563 plasmacytoma cells together with normal syngeneic C3H/HeN spleen cells was implanted in the peritoneal cavity of C3H/HeN mice, these tumor cells continued to proliferate at least 7 to 9 days. In contrast, spleen cells from C3H/HeN mice that had acquired X5563-specific immunity by intradermal (i.d.) inoculation of viable tumor cells, followed by surgical resection of the tumor, exhibited an appreciable inhibitory effect on the growth of X5563 tumor cells admixed in the chamber. This antitumor effect was mediated by Lyt-1+2-T cells and was tumor-specific, because the growth of X5563 or another syngeneic MH134 hepatoma cells was inhibited by spleen cells from C3H/HeN mice immunized to the respective tumor cell types. Most important, these tumor-specific Lyt-1+2-T cells lost their antitumor activity by depleting an adherent cell population contained in spleen cells, indicating that adherent cells are required for the Lyt-1+2-T cell-mediated antitumor effect. This was substantiated by the fact that immune spleen cells depleted of adherent cells could regain their tumor-inhibiting effect when normal spleen cells were added back as an adherent cell source, or more directly by adding back a splenic or peritoneal resident adherent cell population. These results indicate that tumor-specific Lyt-1+2-T cells mediate the tumor growth inhibition and that their antitumor effect depends on the coexistence of an adherent cell population.  相似文献   

2.
The role of antigen-specific helper T cells in augmenting the in vivo development of delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses was investigated. C3H/HeN mice were inoculated i.p. with vaccinia virus to generate virus-reactive helper T cell activity. These vaccinia virus-primed or unprimed mice were subsequently immunized subcutaneously (s.c.) with either trinitrophenyl (TNP)-modified syngeneic spleen cells (TNP-self), vaccinia virus-infected spleen cells (virus-self), or cells modified with TNP subsequent to virus infection (virus-self-TNP). Seven days later, these mice were tested for anti-TNP DTH responses either by challenging them directly with TNP-self into footpads or by utilizing a local adoptive transfer system. The results demonstrated that vaccinia virus-primed mice failed to generate significant anti-TNP DTH responses when s.c. immunization was provided by either virus-self or TNP-self alone. In contrast, vaccinia virus-primed mice, but not unprimed mice, could generate augmented anti-TNP DTH responses when immunized with virus-self-TNP. Anti-vaccinia virus-reactive helper activity was successfully transferred into 600 R x-irradiated unprimed syngeneic mice by injecting i.v. spleen cells from virus-primed mice. These helper T cells were found to be antigen specific and were mediated by Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2- cells. DTH effector cells enhanced by helper T cells were also antigen specific and were of the Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2- phenotype. Furthermore, vaccinia virus-reactive helper T cell activity could be applied to augment the induction of tumor-specific DTH responses by immunization with vaccinia virus-infected syngeneic X5563 tumor cells. T-T cell interaction between Lyt-1+ helper T cells and Lyt-1+ DTH effector T cells is discussed in the light of the augmenting mechanism of in vivo anti-tumor-specific immune responses.  相似文献   

3.
This study establishes assay systems for helper T cell activities assisting cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) and antibody responses to tumor-associated antigens (TAA) and demonstrates the existence of TAA that induce preferentially anti-TAA CTL helper and B cell helper T cell activities in two syngeneic tumor models. C3H/HeN mice were immunized to the syngeneic X5563 plasmacytoma or MH134 hepatoma. Spleen cells from these mice were tested for anti-TAA helper T cell activity capable of augmenting anti-trinitrophenyl(TNP) CTL and anti-TNP antibody responses from anti-TNP CTL and B cell precursors (responding cells) by stimulation with TNP-modified X5563 or MH134 tumor cells. The results demonstrate that cultures of responding cells plus 85OR X-irradiated tumor-immunized spleen cells (helper cells) failed to enhance anti-TNP CTL or antibody responses when in vitro stimulation was provided by either unmodified tumor cells or TNP-modified syngeneic spleen cells (TNP-self). In contrast, these cultures resulted in appreciable augmentation of anti-TNP CTL or antibody response when stimulated by TNP-modified tumor cells. Such anti-TAA helper activities were revealed to be Lyt-1+2- T cell mediated and TAA specific. Most interestingly, immunization with X5563 tumor cells resulted in anti-TAA helper T cell activity involved in CTL, but not in antibody responses. Conversely, TAA of MH134 tumor cells induced selective generation of anti-TAA helper T cell activity responsible for antibody response. These results indicate that there exists the qualitative TAA-heterogeneity as evidenced by the preferential induction of anti-TAA CTL- and B cell-helper T cell activities. The results are discussed in the light of cellular mechanisms underlying the preferential anti-TAA immune responses, and the interrelationship between various types of cell functions including CTL- and B cell-help.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The role of vaccinia virus-reactive helper T cells (Th) in augmenting in vivo generation of antitumor protective immunity and the Ly phenotype mediating the enhanced in vivo tumor immunity were investigated. C3H/HeN mice were inoculated i.p. with viable vaccinia virus to generate vaccinia virus-reactive Th activity. The mice were subsequently immunized i.p. with virus-infected syngeneic X5563 and MH134 tumor cells, and spleen cells from these mice were tested for in vivo tumor neutralizing activity. Immunization of virus-primed mice with virus-uninfected tumor cells and of virus-unprimed mice with virus-infected tumor cells failed to result in in vivo protective immunity. In contrast, spleen cells from mice immunized with virus-infected tumor cells subsequent to virus-priming exhibited potent tumor-specific neutralizing activities. Such an augmented generation of in vivo protective immunity was accompanied by enhanced induction of tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) and antibody activities in X5563 and MH134 tumor systems, respectively. However, analysis of the effector cell type responsible for in vivo tumor neutralization revealed that enhanced in vivo immunity was mediated by Lyt-1+2 T cells in both tumor systems. Moreover, the Lyt-1+2 T cells exerted their function in vivo under conditions in which anti-X5563 tumor-specific CTL or anti-MH134 tumor-specific antibody activity was not detected in recipient mice. These results indicate that augmenting the generation of a tumor-specific Lyt-1+2 T cell population is essential for enhanced tumor-specific immunity in vivo.This work was supported by Special Project Research-Cancer Bioscience from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture  相似文献   

5.
Protective immunity against fatal L. tropica infection in genetically vulnerable BALB/c mice can be induced by prophylactic immunization with irradiated promastigotes even when heat-killed. Such immunity is adoptively transferable transiently into intact or durably into sub-lethally irradiated (200 or 550 rad) syngeneic recipients by splenic T but not B cells. The effector T cells are of the Lyt-1+2- phenotype, devoid of demonstrable cytotoxic activity. The immune splenic T cell population expresses specific helper activity for antibody synthesis. A causal role for helper T cells in this capacity, however, seems unlikely, because it was shown in the accompanying paper that antibody does not determine the protective immunity against L. tropica. The immunized donors show no detectable cutaneous DTH or its early memory recall in response to live or killed promastigotes or a soluble L. tropica antigen preparation. Spleen, lymph node, and peritoneal exudate cells from protectively immunized donors similarly fail to transfer DTH locally or systemically. These cells also lack demonstrable suppressive activity against the expression or induction of DTH to L. tropica. Thus, protection against L. tropica induced by prophylactic i.v. immunization with irradiated promastigotes appears to be conferred by Lyt-1+2- T cells that are distinguishable from T cells mediating either both DTH and T help, or cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

6.
The present study defines assay systems for vaccinia virus-reactive Lyt-1+2- T cells mediating various functions and investigates the positivity of L3T4 antigen on these Lyt-1+2- T cells as well as the role of L3T4 antigen in the activation of these T cells with respect to their functions. C3H/He mice were immunized against vaccinia virus by inoculating viable virus intraperitoneally (i.p.). Anti-vaccinia virus reactivity in lymphoid cells from these immunized mice was assessed by proliferative response, helper T cell activities involved in cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) and B cell (antibody) responses, delayed type-hypersensitivity (DTH) response, and production of lymphokines such as interleukin 2 (IL2) and macrophage-activating factor (MAF). The results demonstrate that all of the above anti-vaccinia virus responses were mediated by Lyt-1+2- T cells and that these Lyt-1+2- T cells expressed L3T4 antigens on their cell surfaces. Moreover, such anti-vaccinia Lyt-1+2- T cell responses were inhibited in the presence of anti-L3T4 antigen antibody. These results indicate that there is a reciprocal relationship between Lyt-2 and L3T4 markers, and that L3T4 antigen is closely related to the activation of various functions of anti-vaccinia virus Lyt-1+2- T cells.  相似文献   

7.
In the present study we investigated some of the cellular mechanisms for the generation of macrophage-activating factor(s) (MAF) in immune responses to tumor antigens. C3H/HeN mice were immunized to syngeneic MH134 hepatoma or MCH-1-A1 fibrosarcoma by intradermal inoculation of viable tumor cells, followed by the surgical resection of the tumor. Spleen and lymph node cells from these tumor-immune mice were stimulated in vitro with the corresponding tumor cells, and supernatant from such a culture was tested for an ability to activate macrophages to exert their cytostatic and cytolytic activities as detected on tumor cells unrelated to immunizing tumors. Peritoneal adherent cells as a macrophage source, which were preincubated with supernatant from co-culture of tumor-unimmunized normal spleen and lymph node cells plus tumor cells, failed to exhibit any significant antitumor effect on unrelated X5563 tumor cells, whereas the addition of supernatant from cultures containing immune lymphocytes to adherent cells resulted in appreciably potent cytostatic and cytolytic effects on X5563 tumor cells, indicating the generation of MAF in culture supernatant. The activation of tumor-immune spleen and lymph node cells for MAF generation was tumor-specific, because anti-MH134- and anti-MCH-1-A1-immune lymphocytes produced MAF by the stimulation with the respective but not with the other alternative tumor cells. Such MAF production was abolished by treatment of tumor-immune spleen and lymph node cells with anti-Thy-1.2 or anti-Lyt-1.1 but not with anti-Lyt-2.1 antibody plus complement before culturing. These results indicate that the tumor-specific Lyt-1+2- T cell subset has a crucial role in generating MAF by which an adherent cell population as a source of macrophages acquires the potential for inducing a cytolytic as well as a cytostatic effect on tumor cells.  相似文献   

8.
The present study was designed to investigate the generation of trinitrophenyl (TNP)-reactive helper T cell activity potent enough to induce the regression of a syngeneic tumor; this occurs by augmenting antitumor-specific immunity through T-T cell interaction. Mice whose skin was painted with trinitrochlorobenzene (TNCB) exhibited a variety of anti-TNP T cell responses, including delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) and cytotoxic T cell responses, as well as helper T cell activity. Pretreatment of C3H/He mice with TNP-conjugated copolymer of D-glutamic acid and lysine (TNP-D-GL) or cyclophosphamide, which have been shown, respectively, to inactivate TNP-specific suppressor T cells or suppressor T cells in general, exhibited a slight or marginal augmentation of DTH and cytotoxic potentials when tested 5 wk after TNCB painting. In contrast, the same pretreatment regimens induced an appreciably amplified generation of anti-TNP helper T cell activity. This amplified TNP-helper T cell activity was demonstrated to enhance cytotoxic responses to antigens other than TNP in an antigen-nonspecific way. In fact, such helper T cells enhanced antitumor CTL responses when co-cultured with spleen cells from syngeneic X5563 plasmacytoma-bearing mice in the presence of TNBS-modified X5563 tumor cells. This amplified TNP-helper cell system was utilized for its immunotherapeutic potential. When TNCB was injected into X5563 tumor mass of syngeneic C3H/He mice in which the amplified TNP-helper T cell activity had been generated, an appreciable number of growing tumors was observed to regress. This contrasted with the low incidence of tumor regression observed in mice in which TNP-helper activity had been induced by TNCB painting without inactivation of suppressors. Thus, the present model provides an effective immunotherapeutic manipulation for eliciting enhanced in vivo tumor regression, and emphasizes a role of helper T cells in augmentation of syngeneic tumor immunity.  相似文献   

9.
This article reviews recent findings that bear on the mechanism(s) of tumor-specific Lyt-1+2? T cell-mediated tumor eradication in vivo A tumor-immune Lyt-1+2? T cell subset has been identified which is distinct from T cells mediating in vitro cytotoxicity (Lyt-1+2+/1?2+). The Lyt-1+2? cells have a crucial role in rejecting tumor cells when adoptively transferred into T cell-deprived B cell mice. This indicates that Lyt-1+2? T cells do not necessarily require recruitment of the host's cytotoxic T cell precursors for implementation of in vivo immunity. Instead, this T cell subset exerts its anti-tumor effect in collaboration with macrophages as shown with an in vivo tumor cell culture system utilizing a diffusion chamber. A pathway of Lyt-1+2? T cell-macrophage interaction leading to tumor cell killing is discussed in terms of its probable relevance to the eradication of tumor cell masses consisting of tumor cells expressing quantitatively and/or qualitatively different tumor antigens.  相似文献   

10.
The role of the tumor-unique determinant(s) on two syngeneic murine hepatoma cells in inducing in vivo protective immunity was investigated in comparison with that of the tumor-cross-reactive determinant(s). Induction of vaccinia-reactive helper T cells in C3H/He mice by intraperitoneal (i.p.) inoculation of viable vaccinia virus and then immunization with vaccinia-infected syngeneic MH134 or MH129 tumor cells resulted in the production of potent anti-MH134 or -MH129 antibody as well as the generation of in vivo protective immunity. Neither antibody reacted with other syngeneic plasmacytoma or fibrosarcoma cells, but both cross-reacted appreciably with the other hepatoma cells as well reacted strongly as with the tumor cells used for immunization. The absorptions of anti-MH134 and -MH129 antisera with the respective hepatoma cells abolished their reactivities with both the corresponding hepatoma cells and the other hepatoma cells. In contrast, the absorption of these antisera with the other tumor cells resulted in loss of their cross-reactivities with the other hepatoma cells, but not loss of their specific reactivity to the respective hepatoma cells. Although in these hematoma systems, the above-mentioned immunization protocol resulted in in vivo induction of protective immunity and generation of antibodies, in vivo immunity as observed by Winn assays was mediated by Lyt-1+2- T cells and was specific for each type of hepatoma cells. These results indicate that these two types of hepatoma cells bear two kinds of antigenic determinants, one kind unique to each hepatoma and the other kind cross-reactive with the other hepatoma cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
By using two different syngeneic tumors, Meth A sarcoma and RL male 1 lymphoma of BALB/c origin, the present study was designed to investigate the subset(s) of T cells mediating in vivo antitumor immune responses and some of the effector mechanisms of in vivo protective immunity in BALB/c mice immunized against tumor or bearing tumor. Spleen cells from the mice immunized against Meth A tumor or bearing Meth A tumor inhibited the growth of Meth A tumor in the Winn assay. In the Meth A-immunized mice, L3T4+ (CD4+) cells played a major role in mediating the inhibitory activity against Meth A tumor growth, whereas in the Meth A-bearing mice, the antitumor protective immunity was mediated by both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ (CD8+) cells. Spleen cells from the Meth A-immunized or Meth A-bearing mice were not able to generate cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) directed against Meth A tumor after the in vitro restimulation of spleen cells with mitomycin C (MMC)-treated Meth A cells, while fresh spleen cells from the Meth A-immunized or Meth A-bearing mice were able to induce the strong delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses to Meth A tumor. The DTH response to Meth A tumor was mediated by L3T4+ cells in the Meth A-immunized mice and by both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ cells in the Meth A-bearing mice. In the similar experiments performed in the RL male 1 lymphoma, the antitumor activity in spleen cells from the RL male 1-immunized or RL male 1-bearing mice depended on Lyt-2+ but not L3T4+ cells in the Winn assay. When spleen cells from the RL male 1-immunized or RL male 1-bearing mice were cultured with MMC-treated RL male 1 cells for 5 days, an appreciable CTL response to RL male 1 tumor was induced. These results suggest that the nature of tumor and/or tumor antigens determines which T cell subset is required to exhibit the protective immunity against tumor and thus the different effector mechanisms could be induced in the different tumor models. Furthermore, these data support the conclusion that antitumor T cell responses are affected by the immune state of host to tumor.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Summary A new haptenic compound, a muramyl dipeptide (MDP) derivative (designated as L4-MDP-ONB) cross-reactive with Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) was synthesized. The cross-reactivity of L4-MDP hapten to BCG was demonstrated from the following evidence; (a) lymph node cells from BCG-primed C3H/HeN mice exhibited appreciable L4-MDP-specific proliferative responses to the in vitro stimulation of L4-MDP-modified syngeneic cells (L4-MDP-self); (b) inoculation of L4-MDP-self into footpads of BCG-primed C3H/HeN mice elicited ample delayed type-hypersensitivity (DTH) responses in vivo as measured by footpad swelling; and (c) BCG-primed mice contained L4-MDP-reactive helper T cell activity which functions to augment the generation of effector T cell responses to cell surface antigens. This crossreactivity between L4-MDP hapten and BCG as measured by the helper T cell activity was applied to enhanced induction of tumor-specific immunity. When BCG-primed C3H/HeN mice were immunized with L4-MDP-modified syngeneic X5563 tumor cells, these mice could generate augmented tumor-specific in vivo protective (tumor neutralizing) immunity as well as in vitro cytotoxic T cell responses. These results indicate the effectiveness of L4-MDP hapten in augmenting tumor-specific immunity. The present approach is discussed in the context of potential advantages of this new hapten for its future application to clinical tumor systems.  相似文献   

14.
The SJL strain of mice possess a unique developmental delay in the ability to exhibit delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses after immunization with a wide variety of Ag. Similar to other models of DTH, the adoptive transfer of syngeneic Ag-pulsed macrophages from DTH-responsive mice into these DTH-unresponsive mice results in the activation of Ag-specific, CD4+ DTH effector Th1 T cells. The absence of other defects in APC-dependent immune responses indicate that the macrophages is the sole APC required for the induction of DTH effector T cells in SJL mice. The defect occurs during the sensitization phase of the DTH response; however, it has not been determined whether a Th cell, which is required for the induction of CD4+ DTH effector T cells, was present in the DTH unresponsive SJL mice. In this study, we have determined that the Thy-1+ helper cell is induced upon Ag stimulation of nonresponder mice and present evidence for the existence of an accessory cell distinct from the macrophage that induces CD4+ DTH effector T cells. Our data indicate that CD4+ DTH effector T cells are induced in an Ag-specific and MHC-restricted manner by an adherent macrophage that expresses the Mac-1+, Mac-2-, Mac-3+, I-A+ phenotype. Adoptive transfer of as few as 100 of the Mac-1+, Mac-2-, or Mac-3+ subsets from DTH responsive donors to DTH unresponsive recipients is able to overcome the DTH deficit. The activation of CD4+ DTH effector T cells in the SJL mouse cells also requires a Thy-1+, Lyt-1+, CD3-, CD4-, CD8-, helper cell. In contrast to the Mac-1+, Mac-3+, I-A+ accessory cell, this helper cell requires an adherent, irradiation resistant, accessory cell that expresses the Mac-1+, Mac-2-, Mac-3-, I-A- surface phenotype for activation. Further, the interaction between this accessory cell and the Thy-1+ helper cell is neither Ag-specific nor MHC restricted. This is the first demonstration of an accessory cell requirement for the Thy-1+, Lyt-1+, B220-, CD4-, CD8-, CD3- DTH Th cell. These data indicate that the activation of the triple negative helper cells and subsequent activation of the CD4+ effector T cells are regulated by two distinct macrophage subpopulations.  相似文献   

15.
Several animal models have been developed in which the adoptive transfer of specifically immune syngeneic T cells has been shown to mediate the eradication of established tumors. In adoptive chemoimmunotherapy (ACIT) of disseminated FBL leukemia with cyclophosphamide and immune T cells, the major effector T cell has been shown to be a noncytolytic Lyt-1+2- T cell that mediates its therapeutic effect without the participation of CTL. Because studies in other models have suggested that CTL can mediate an anti-tumor effect, the efficacy of Lyt-2+ T cells rendered highly cytolytic before adoptive transfer in ACIT of disseminated FBL was examined. The results demonstrated that such CTL had a detectable but limited therapeutic effect in the treatment of FBL. Because this limited activity of transferred purified CTL might have reflected a requirement for helper T cells to produce IL 2 for promotion of the in vivo survival and proliferation of the CTL, the effect of administering IL 2 to tumor-bearing hosts after transfer of CTL was examined. A dose of IL 2 previously shown to induce in vivo proliferation of transferred T cells rendered CTL that were minimally effective alone curative in ACIT of FBL leukemia. Thus, either lymphokine-producing T cells or the lymphokines produced by these cells are necessary for the full expression of the in vivo therapeutic potential of CTL.  相似文献   

16.
We previously demonstrated that injection of a high dose (4 X 10(9] of sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) into C57BL/6 mice results in the generation of splenic B cells (plastic nonadherent, Thy-1- and Ig+) which, when transferred to normal syngeneic recipients, subsequently induce antigen-specific suppressor T cells to suppress the recipient's plaque-forming cell (PFC) responses to SRBC. In the present study we characterized the suppressor-inducer B cells phenotypically. Cytotoxic treatment of the donor's immune spleen cells with anti-Lyt-1 antibody plus complement (C'), but not with anti-Lyt-2 antibody plus C', relieved the suppression of PFC responses in recipients. The FcRr+ population separated by EA-rosette formation showed enriched suppressor-inducing activity, whereas the FcRr- population showed no activity. Our findings, taken together with the previous ones, suggest that suppressor-inducer cells are Thy-1-, Lyt-1+, Lyt-2-, FcRr+, and Ig+.  相似文献   

17.
In order to clarify the effect of recombinant human tumor necrosis factor (rHu-TNF) on the antitumor T cell immune response, we examined the effect of rHu-TNF on the generation of cytotoxic T cells (CTL) against syngeneic tumor cells. Spleen cells from X5563 plasmacytoma-transplanted mice were stimulated in vitro with mitomycin C-treated X5563 cells in the presence or absence of rHu-TNF. The generation of CTL was augmented in a dose-dependent manner by the addition of rHu-TNF. The augmenting effect of rHu-TNF was more marked when indomethacin was added to the culture. The augmenting effect was observed only when rHu-TNF was added at the early stage of the generation of CTL. The cell surface phenotype of CTL generated was L3T4- and Lyt2+. The augmentation was shown not only by the chromium-51 release assay but also by the Winn assay. As to the specificity, the augmentation of CTL generation was observed by the addition of rHu-TNF when responder-primed spleen cells were stimulated with the tumor cells in vitro. On the other hand, augmentation was not observed when responder spleen cells were not stimulated with the tumor cells in vitro, or when responder spleen cells were obtained from normal mice. The CTL generated was not cytotoxic against other tumor cells of the same haplotype. Thus, rHu-TNF augmented the generation of CTL against syngeneic tumor cells in an antigen-specific manner. The in vivo effect of rHu-TNF was examined by administering rHu-TNF into X5563-bearing mice. The spleen cells of rHu-TNF-injected mice generated a much higher CTL activity against X5563 cells in vitro than did the spleen cells of uninjected mice. From these results, a possibility can be considered that in some cases, rHu-TNF may exert its antitumor activity by stimulating the immune system.  相似文献   

18.
The immunity of BALB.B mice to syngeneic Gross murine leukemia virus (MuLV)-induced B.GV cells was studied at various times after infection by Trypanosoma cruzi. BALB.B mice chronically infected by the parasite do not develop an effective immune response against B.GV tumor cells, and B.GV tumor growth in vivo is consequently facilitated. The tumor-specific cytolytic T lymphocyte (CTL) compartment in these mice was studied in vitro because CTL are known to participate actively in syngeneic tumor rejection. These analyses showed that: a) CTL differentiation is suppressed in mice with chronic T. cruzi infections; b) suppression is at the level of CTL precursor cell activation; c) suppression is not antigen-specific; and d) suppression is mediated by macrophages and Lyt-2+ T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The present study investigates some of mechanisms for tumor-specific Lyt-1+2 T cell-mediated tumor cell eradication in vivo through analyses of tumor specificity in the afferent tumor recognition and efferent rejection phases. When C3H/He mice which had acquired immunity against syngeneic MH134 hepatoma were challenged with other syngeneic X5563 plasmacytoma cells, these mice failed to exhibit any inhibitory effect on the growth of X5563 tumor cells. However, the inoculation of X5563 tumor cells into the MH134-immune C3H/He mice together with the MH134 tumor cells resulted in appreciable growth inhibition of antigenically distinct (bystander) X5563 tumor cells. Although the growth of X5563 cells was inhibited in an antigen-nonspecific way in mice immunized to antigenically unrelated tumor cells (bystander effect), the activation of Lyt-1+2 T cells leading to this effect was strictly antigen-specific. Such a bystander growth inhibition also required the admixed inoculation of the bystander (X5563) and specific target (MH134) tumor cells into a single site in mice immunized against the relevant MH134 tumor cells. Furthermore, the results demonstrated that Lyt-1+2 T cells specific to MH134 tumor cells were responsible for mediating the growth inhibition of antigenically irrelevant (bystander) and relevant tumor cells. These results are discussed in the context of cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the Lyt-1+2 T cell-initiated bystander phenomenon.This work was supported by Special Project Research-Cancer Bioscience from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture  相似文献   

20.
Summary C3H/He mice were inoculated i.v. with 106 heavily X-irradiated syngeneic X5563 plasmacytoma cells 3 times at 4 day intervals. When these mice received an appropriate immunization procedure consisting of i. d. inoculation of viable tumor cells plus the surgical resection of the tumor which enables i.v. nonpresensitized mice to produce anti-X5563 immunity, they failed to develop tumor-specific immunity. This was demonstrated by the abrogation in potential of spleen and lymph node cells to generate in vivo protective immunity. In contrast, the tumor mass from X5563 tumor-bearing mice which had received the i.v. presensitization contained comparable anti-X5563 tumor neutralizing activity to that obtained from the tumor mass from nonpresensitized, X5563 tumor-bearing mice. Such an in vivo protective immunity was revealed to be mediated by tumor-specific T cells. These results demonstrate the differential generation and antitumor capability of tumor infiltrating T cells and T cells in lymphoid organs from mice which are in the tumor-specific tolerant state. The results are discussed in the context of potential utilization of tumor infiltrating in vivo protective T cells to enhance the local tumor-specific immunity in tumor-specific tolerant mice.This work was supported by Special Project Research-Cancer Bioscience from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture  相似文献   

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