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1.
Immunization can prevent tumor growth, but the effector cells directly responsible for tumor cell killing in immunized hosts remain undetermined. The present study compares tumor grafts that progress in naive syngeneic rats with the same grafts that completely regress in hosts preimmunized with an immunogenic cell variant. The progressive tumors contain only a few macrophages that remain at the periphery of the tumor without direct contact with the cancer cells. These macrophages do not kill tumor cells in vitro. In contrast, tumors grafted in immunized hosts and examined at the beginning of tumor regression show a dramatic infiltration with mature macrophages, many of them in direct contact with the cancer cells. These macrophages are strongly cytotoxic for the tumor cells in vitro. In contrast to macrophages, tumor-associated lymphocytes are not directly cytotoxic to the tumor cells, even when obtained from tumor-immune rats. However, CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells prepared from the regressing tumors induce tumoricidal activity in splenic macrophages from normal or tumor-bearing rats and in macrophages that infiltrate progressive tumors. These results strongly suggest that the main tumoricidal effector cells in preimmunized rats are macrophages that have been activated by adjacent tumor-immune lymphocytes.  相似文献   

2.
Cytotoxic responses of UV-irradiated mice against syngeneic UV-induced tumors were measured by using a 51Cr-release assay to determine if UV treatment induced a specific reduction of cytotoxic activity. The in vivo and in vitro primary responses against syngeneic tumors and allogeneic cells were unaffected, as was the "memory" response (in vivo stimulation, in vitro restimulation) against alloantigens. In contrast, the memory response of UV-treated mice against syngeneic, UV-induced tumors was consistently and significantly depressed. The cytotoxicity generated by tumor cell stimulation in vivo or in vitro was tumor-specific and T cell-dependent. Since the primary response against syngeneic UV-induced tumors produces apparently normal amounts of tumor-specific cytotoxic activity, UV-treated mice may not reject transplanted syngeneic tumors because of too few T effector memory cells. These results imply that, at least in this system, tumor rejection depends mostly on the secondary responses against tumor antigens and that at least one carcinogen can, indirectly, specifically regulate immune responses.  相似文献   

3.
Skin tumors induced in mice by chronic ultraviolet (UV) irradiation are highly antigenic and are frequently immunologically rejected upon transplantation to normal syngeneic recipients. In this study we characterized this immune response with an in vitro microcytotoxicity test. Cytotoxic activity was present in the spleen cells of mice given a single injection of syngeneic UV-induced fibrosarcoma cells. After removal of adherent spleen cells, the remaining splenic lymphocytes were specifically cytotoxic for the immunizing tumor and showed no cross-reactivity with other syngeneic UV-induced or methylcholanthrene-induced tumors of similar histologic type. The level of cell-mediated reactivity against UV-induced tumors was quite high compared to that obtained with syngeneic tumors induced by methylcholanthrene, and the cytotoxicity was attributable to a population of theta antigen-bearing lymphocytes. With this in vitro test, we compared the response of normal mice, which reject a syngeneic tumor challenge, with that of UV-irradiated mice, in which the syngeneic UV-induced tumors grow progressively. After tumor cell inoculation, lymphocytes form the unirradiated (regressor) mice showed a high degree of cytotoxicity that reached a maximum level 8 days after injection. In contrast, no reactivity could be detected in the spleens of tumor-challenged UV-irradiated (progressor) mice.  相似文献   

4.
H-2 dependency of T cell-mediated cytotoxicity and transplantation immunity to leukemia-associated antigens has been investigated. Through the use of a 20-hr 125IUdR release assay, it was found that the induction of T cell-mediated cytotoxicity against Friend virus-induced leukemias of different H-2 haplotype orgins could be produced by immunization with both syngeneic and allogeneic tumor cells; the effector cells that were generated by syngeneic immunization could also provide effective killing of allogeneic tumor cells, although the killing of allogeneic targets might require a longer incubation time (20 to 40 hr). Furthermore, in vivo transplantation immunity against Friend virus-induced leukemias also was induced by immunization with both syngeneic and allogeneic tumors and syngeneic immunization could induce specific protection against the challenge with a-logeneic tumor in x-irradiated hosts. These findings clearly indicate that, both at the sensitizing phase and effector phase of the immune response, there is no strict H-2 dependency for T cell-mediated cytotoxicity or in in vivo transplantation imunity to leukemia-associated antigens.  相似文献   

5.
It has been shown that peritoneal exudate cells (PEC) from BALB/c mice immunized with minor histocompatibility antigens presented by DBA/2 or B10.D2 spleen cells are capable of lysing syngeneic YC8 tumor cells in a 4-hr 51Cr-release assay. In this study, we employed limiting dilution analysis to determine the frequency of CTL precursors (CTL-P) reactive against both the specific DBA/2 (or P815) target and the syngeneic tumor YC8. The mean frequency of anti-DBA/2 CTL-P in PEC from BALB/c mice immunized with DBA/2 was 1/302. Between one-third and one-fifth of limiting dilution microcultures that exhibited lytic activity against DBA/2 lymphoblasts (or P815) were also able to lyse YC8. No lysis of YC8 was observed in the absence of a parallel lysis on DBA/2 lymphoblasts or P815 target cells. T cell clones, derived by micromanipulation from microcultures selected for cytotoxic activity against YC8 and/or P815, maintained either the specific anti-allogeneic or the doubly reactive ( antiallogeneic plus anti-syngeneic tumor) phenotype. Fourteen clones (six specific and eight doubly reactive) were tested for cytotoxic activity on a panel of target cells with different haplotypes. All showed H-2-restricted specificity for minor histocompatibility antigens shared by DBA/2 and B10.D2. The restriction element for some of the clones mapped in the K region of the H-2 complex, whereas for other clones the restriction element mapped in the D region; both K- and D-restricted clones were able to lyse YC8. When the clones that exhibited lysis on YC8 were tested on two other BALB/c tumor targets, LSTRA, a Moloney virus induced lymphoma, and RL male-1, a radiation induced lymphoma, two of seven were found to lyse all three syngeneic tumor targets equally well, but not syngeneic BALB/c blasts. These clones were functionally categorized as conventional CTL because they were unable to proliferate when cultured with antigen in the absence of exogenous lymphokines, and were unable to produce lymphokine with IL 2 activity when stimulated by the appropriate splenocytes. When tested in vivo in a Winn assay, a strong anti-tumor activity against YC8 was exerted by the anti-DBA/2 clones DY4 -3 and DY16 -3. These clones lysed both YC8 and the immunizing target cells in vitro. No in vivo effect in neutralizing YC8 tumor growth was observed with clone D2-1, a clone that lysed DBA/2 targets but not YC8 in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
A primary in vitro sensitization system employing a chromium release assay was utilized to investigate reactivity of murine spleen cells toward syngeneic ultraviolet (uv) light induced fibrosarcomas. These tumors are immunologically rejected in vivo when implanted into normal syngeneic mice but grow progressivly when implanted into syngeneic mice that had previously been irradiated with subcarcinogenic levels of uv light. Following appropriate sensitization, spleen cells from both normal and uv irradiated mice are capable of developing cytotoxic lymphocytes in vitro against the uv induced tumors. It was subsequently discovered that in situ uv induced tumors all contained macrophages of host origin that became demonstrable only after enzymatic dissociation of the tumor tissue. These macrophages were immunologically active in vitro as their presence in the stimulator cell population was necessary to achieve an optimum anti-tumor cytotoxic response following in vitro sensitization. Anti-tumor reactivity generated by mixing spleen cells and tumor cells in the absence of tumor derived macrophages could be greatly enhanced by the addition of normal syngeneic peritoneal macrophages. When in vitro anti-tumor reactivity of spleen cells from normal and uv treated mice was compared under these conditions we again found no significant difference in the magnitude of the responses. In addition, the cytotoxic cells generated in response to uv induced tumors appeared to be highly cross reactive with respect to their killing potential. Cross reactive killing was observed between all uv induced tumors tested as well as with a syngeneic benz[a]pyrene (BP) induced fibrosarcoma. No cytotoxicity was observed against normal syngeneic PEC's even through these cells were shown to be susceptible to lysis by anti-H-2k effector cells. It was concluded that: (a) A significant number of host-derived macrophages are present in uv tumor tissue. (b) These macrophages are important for the in vitro generation of tumor specific cytotoxicity. (c) Spleen cells from uv treated mice are capable of recognizing and responding against uv tumor associated antigens in vitro. Cytotoxic effector cells generated in response to uv induced tumors appear to have specificity for tumor associated antigens (TAA) present on all uv tumors tested as well as a syngeneic BP induced tumor. The relationship between in vivo and in vitro reactivity against uv tumors is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the in vitro responses of immune lymphocytes to the tumor antigens of the syngeneic rat mammary adenocarcinoma 13762A. This tumor readily metastasizes to lymph node and lungs and is poorly immunogenic. Rats were immunized with a highly immunogenic clone (18A) which was isolated as a spontaneous variant from the parental 13762A tumor. Clone 18A grew progressively in irradiated rats but regressed completely in normal rats. Animals immune to 18A tumor were also immune to parental 13762A. Lymphocytes obtained from the spleen and peritoneum of immune rats were tested for specific proliferation to parental 13762A tumor and clone 18A to determine whether similar cross-reactivity to these tumors occurred in vitro. We found an anatomical difference in localization of immune lymphocytes which reacted to the two tumor cell lines. Immune peritoneal exudate cells (PEC) responded strongly to clone 18A but poorly to 13762A, while immune spleen cells from the same animals responded predominantly to 13762A tumor. After 7 days culture, PEC proliferating in response to clone 18A contained 84-95% W3/25+ T-helper cells, and only 5-8% OX8+ cytotoxic/suppressor cells, while analogous cultures of spleen cells responding to parental 13762A tumor consisted of 60-80% W3/25+ cells and 20-23% OX8+ cells. Immune spleen cell cultures stimulated with 13762A tumor generated cytotoxic lymphocytes which specifically lysed both parental 13762A and clone 18A cells. We conclude that despite cross-reactivity in vivo and in vitro, antigens present on 13762A and 18A tumor cells stimulated different subsets of immune T cells.  相似文献   

8.
Syngeneic tumor cell lines free of endogenous type C virus or viral antigen antigen expression were derived from spontaneously occurring tumors of the BALB/cCr mouse. Two cell lines free of endogenous type C virus were examined and found to be highly tumorigenic in tumor growth kinetic studies. In vitro inoculation of these cell lines with Rauscher-murine leukemia virus (R-MuLV) resulted in their chronic infection in which 95 to 100% of the cells were scored as virus positive. These infected lines showed a highly significant increase in their immunogenicity as compared to their uninfected controls. Animals in which these virus-positive tumors regressed were then shown to be highly resistant to challenge with the uninfected tumor cell lines as well as to live R-MuLV. This observed resistance to uninfected tumor cell lines could not be induced by immunization of the mouse with uninfected tumor cells and R-MuLV simultaneously at the same injection site, nor could it be induced with lethally irradiated virus-infected tumor cells, subtumorigenic doses of uninfected cells, or inactivated R-MuLV or Gross leukemia virus (G-MuLV). Cell-mediated cytotoxicity studies revealed that spleen cells obtained from animals whose virus-infected tumors regressed were cytotoxic to homologous infected and uninfected tumor cells as well as to other uninfected tumor cell lines syngeneic to the BALB/c mouse. Correlation of in vitro cytotoxicity with in vivo immunity was provided by the Winn assay, by inoculation into susceptible mice of immune and nonimmune spleen cells premixed with uninfected tumor cells. The immune cells were highly effective in preventing this tumor cell transplantation. It was concluded that type-C virus infection of these syngeneic tumor cells resulted in their acquiring strong transplantation antigens that were in part due to the virion, but were at least in part due to alterations of antigens or haptens that are present in a less immunogenic form on the uninfected tumor cell.  相似文献   

9.
In allogeneic tumor or skin transplantation, the rejection process that destroys the allogeneic cells leaves syngeneic cells intact by discrimination between self and nonself. Here, we examined whether the cells infiltrating into the allografts could be cytotoxic against syngeneic immortal cells in vitro and in vivo. The leukocytes (i.e., macrophages (Mphi; 55-65% of bulk infiltrates), granulocytes (20-25%), and lymphocytes (15-20%)) infiltrating into allografts, but not into autografts, in C57BL/6 mice were cytotoxic against syngeneic tumor cells and cell lines, whereas the cytotoxic activity was hardly induced in allografted, IFN-gamma-/- C57BL/6 mice. Among the leukocytes, Mphi were the major population of cytotoxic cells; and the cytotoxic activity appeared to be cell-to-cell contact dependent. When syngeneic tumor cells were s.c. injected into normal C57BL/6 mice simultaneously with the Mphi-rich population or allogeneic, but not syngeneic, fibroblastic cells, tumor growth was suppressed in a cell number-dependent manner, and tumor cells were rejected either with a Mphi:tumor ratio of about 30 or with an allograft:tumor ratio of approximately 200. In the case of IFN-gamma-/- C57BL/6 mice, however, the s.c. injection of the allograft simultaneously with tumor cells had no effect on the tumor growth. These results suggest that allograft or allograft-induced Mphi may be applicable for use in cancer treatment and that IFN-gamma induction by the allograft may be crucial for the treatment.  相似文献   

10.
Measurement of the development of cytolytic activity by mammary tumor primed or unprimed syngeneic spleen cells on in vitro monolayers of the 13762 rat mammary tumor operationally defined several subpopulations of lymphoid cells involved in the cytotoxic response. In vitro sensitization of cells from Fischer 344 animals injected 2 to 10 days earlier with 2 x 10(7) viable tumor cells always resulted in a higher and earlier lytic response than cells from non-inoculated animals. Adoptive transfer of the same in vivo primed cells for 5 days in irradiated syngeneic hosts removed any cytotoxic cells originally present but subsequent in vitro sensitization still resulted in a higher and earlier cytolytic response. We defined such cells as "memory" cells for cytotoxicity. Memory cells were radiosensitive and specific for the immunizing target cell. In contrast to cells from animals inoculated for 3 to 10 days, cells obtained 11 and 12 days after immunization had a lower response than unprimed cells on vitro sensitization. The anamnestic response could be restored either by culturing 12-day primed cells in vitro for 2 days without antigen or by adoptive transfer for 5 days into irradiated syngeneic rats. This suggests that another population of cells is present in spleen and suppresses the conversion of memory to cytotoxic cells. A more direct measurement of suppressor cell function was obtained by coincubating tumor-primed and unprimed cells on monolayers during in vitro sensitization. Cells from animals bearing tumors for 5 to 10 days always caused an increase in the response of the mixed lymphocyte groups, whereas 11- to 13-day tumor primed cells always caused a marked decrease in the cytolytic response. These results suggest the following interpretation of the kinetics of cell-mediated cytotoxicity to syngeneic tumor inoculation. Cytotoxic cells appear about 6 days after immunization, reach peak levels 2 days later, and then decrease rapidly. Memory cells are generated at a faster rate, reach peak levels before maximum cytolytic activity, but are then functionally inhibited from converting into differentiated cytotoxic cells by a new population of suppressor cells which reach peak activity about 12 days after immunization.  相似文献   

11.
An L3T4-, Lyt2+ tumor-specific, cloned T-lymphocyte cell line (RTT-2) was isolated from a spleen cell population harvested from C3H/HeJ mice, following in vivo immunization against a syngeneic MCA-induced fibrosarcoma (MCA-F) and in vitro restimulation with 1-butanol-extracted, isoelectrophoretically purified MCA-F tumor-specific transplantation antigen (TSTA). RTT-2 required exposure to homotypic-extracted MCA-F TSTA in combination with low-dose IL-2 to maintain its specific cytotoxic activity in vitro. In vivo local adoptive transfer of RTT-2 caused specific neutralization of homotypic MCA-F, but not heterotypic MCA-D, tumor cells. Systemic in vivo transfer of RTT-2 alone augmented host resistance. In combination with a triple regimen of weekly doses of purified TSTA (1 microgram SC) and a single ip injection of CY (20 mg/kg), adoptive transfer of RTT-2 cells (1 X 10(7)) retarded the neoplastic outgrowth in and prolonged the survival of primary hosts bearing 3-, 7-, and 14-day established MCA-F tumors. In a spontaneous pulmonary metastasis model following amputation of a tumor-bearing limb, the triple regimen of TSTA/CY/RTT-2 markedly reduced the number of lung colonies. Thus RTT-2, which displays specific tumoricidal activity in vitro and in vivo, may afford a suitable tool to dissect T-cell receptors recognizing tumor markers on 1-butanol-extracted, MCA-F TSTA.  相似文献   

12.
S Fujimoto 《Human cell》1989,2(2):109-121
It is essential to investigate and elucidate the immune response especially T cell response to either syngeneic or autologous tumor for establishing a rational immunotherapy of cancer. We reported that major immune effector cells capable of inducing tumor regression are cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). We found that there are at least two distinct CTL subsets directed to syngeneic tumor. One CTL subset which is selectively induced by syngeneic solid tumor is independent from CD4 positive helper T cells but requires a soluble factor (s) released from macrophage-like accessory cells designated killer T cell activating factor (KAF) in its induction and generation directed to the homologous tumor. The other CTL subset which is usually induced by syngeneic tumor of hematocytic origin is dependent on CD4 positive helper T cells in its induction. On the basis of our findings regarding the induction and activation mechanism of CTL to syngeneic tumors in the mouse, we have investigated the mechanisms of human CTL generation to autochthonous tumor in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of cancer patients. It was found that the nature of human CTL and its generation to autochthonous tumor are similar to those of murine CTL to syngeneic solid tumor. We are now establishing a rational cancer specific immunotherapy utilizing intravenous passive cell transfer of in vitro activated CTL to autochthonous tumor into an original cancer patient.  相似文献   

13.
Murine tumors induced by ultraviolet light (UV) are immunogenic in syngeneic and semi-syngeneic hosts, evoking antibody of several different specificities. Cytotoxic antibody specific for the immunizing syngeneic tumor (tumor-specific antigen) comprises the early response and a minor portion of the later response of C3H and C3H.SW mice. It is the primary specificity to which C57BL/6 and C57BL/10 hosts respond. The major portion of the antibody produced by C3H and C3H.SW against syngeneic tumors cross-reacts strongly with other tumors, both UV and chemically induced, arising in C3H and C3H.SW but not in B6.H2k, C57BL/6, C57BL/10, or (C3H X B6)F1. Normal adult cells or embryonic fibroblasts do not cross-react with the antisera. These results are interpreted as evidence for the involvement of a host component (non-MHC) in this tumor-associated antigen (TAA). (C3H X B6)F1 and (C3H X BALB/c)F1 hosts respond to C3H tumors with antibody with cross-reactive specificities identical to those of the C3H and C3H.SW hosts. thus detecting the TAA(C3H) specificity. (C3H X B6)F1 hosts respond to syngeneic F1 tumors, however, with a totally cross-reactive antibody that is interpreted as evidence for the existence of a common antigen in addition to the evident immune response control. An undetected TAA (B6) specificity in the (C3H X B6)F1 tumors is speculatively proposed.  相似文献   

14.
T cytotoxic cells generated to syngeneic SV40 virus transformants lyse only SV40 target cells that are syngeneic at the H-2 locus. In contrast, SV40-specific tumor transplantation immunity shows no requirements for syngeneic H-2. Inoculation of allogeneic or even xenogeneic transformants will confer immunity to a challenge of syngeneic SV40 tumor cells. The experiments described here represent an attempt to reconcile these apparently conflicting observations. In our hands, generation of SV40-specific T cytotoxic cells in vitro requires both in vivo priming and secondary in vitro sensitization. We have found that priming for a secondary syngeneic-restricted response requires only that the cell employed be SV40 transformed. That is, priming may be accomplished with syngeneic, allogeneic, or xenogeneic SV40 transformants. Thus, the apparent lack of H-2 restriction in vivo immunity does not eliminate a role for the H-2-restricted cytotoxic T cell in tumor transplantation immunity.  相似文献   

15.
Splenic T cells from animals bearing growing syngeneic tumors specifically inhibited the effector process of tumor cell lysis by the cytotoxic T cell which had been activated in vitro by mitomycin C treated homologous tumor. The suppression was strictly specific for the individual tumor by which suppressor cells were generated, whereas in some cases cytotoxic T cells generated by two closely related sarcomas showed a certain degree of crossreactivity. This suggests that suppressor and cytotoxic T cells recognize different antigenic moieties on tumor cells; one unique to the individual tumor and the other shared by related tumor cell lines.The suppressor T cell from tumor bearing animals possessed Ia antigen controlled by a gene in I-J subregion of H-2 major histocompatibility complex. Cytotoxic T cells generated by some but not all syngeneic tumors were also killed by anti-Ia and complement; however, the Ia antigen on such cytotoxic T cells was found to be controlled by a locus in I-A subregion. In general, the cytotoxic T cells generated by newly established tumor cell lines had Ia antigen, whereas some old cell lines, which were capable of growing across the H-2 barrier, activated the Ia negative cytotoxic T cell. These results collectively indicate that the immunological resistance against tumors is dependent on the balance of activations of the cytotoxic and suppressor T cells with different specificities and phenotypic expressions.  相似文献   

16.
We investigated the interaction between T lymphocytes and macrophages in the vitro sensitization of lymphocytes against tumor cells. Spleen cells were sensitized in vitro by syngeneic peritoneal macrophages that had been fed with cell-free antigen preparation of syngeneic tumor cells. The sensitized T lymphocytes acquired specific cytotoxic cells. The sensitized T lymphocytes acquired specific cytotoxic activity in vitro and the capacity to inhingeneic fibroblasts, or the antigen preparation by itself were not able to sensitize the lymphocytes against the tumor.  相似文献   

17.
Generation of cytotoxic lymphocytes by SV40-induced antigens   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In order to study the correlation of in vivo tumor transplantation immunity and in vitro immunologic assays, cell-mediated cytotoxicity against SV40-transformed cells was studied in AL/N strain mice by using 51Cr-release assay. Killing of SV40-transformed AL/N fibroblast cells was observed by spleen cells of AL/N mice immunized with syngeneic SV40-transformed cells. Immunization with the solubilized SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (TSTA) that induced transplantation immunity in vivo did not elicit cytotoxic spleen cells in vitro. However, the spleen cells from mice immunized with solubilized TSTA and then sensitized in vitro with SV40-transformed cells became cytotoxic against SV40-transformed fibroblasts. Similarly, SV40 TSTA (T antigen) purified by immunoprecipitation was able to prime the lymphocytes in AL/N mice: the primed lymphocytes could differentiate into cytotoxic lymphocytes upon in vitro stimulation by SV40-transformed cells. These data indicate that SV40 TSTA (T antigen) plays a role in the induction of cytotoxic lymphocytes.  相似文献   

18.
Cultured SV40-transformed fibroblasts from C3H mice (SV-C3H) were "adapted" to in vivo growth by serial passage through sublethally irradiated, syngeneic recipients. After four in vivo passages, a population of cells was obtained (V4) that was weakly oncogenic in nonirradiated mice. Cells isolated from large V4 tumors (V5) were found to be highly oncogenic, producing lethal tumors at doses of less than 10(3) cells. V5 is insensitive to SV40-specific transplantation immunity in syngeneic animals but can be rejected completely by H-2 allogeneic mice. In vitro studies revealed that although V4 and the parent SV-C3H cells can induce SV40-specific cytotoxic T cells (CTL) in vitro and are lysed by these CTL, V5 does neither. The failure of V5 to interact with CTL was traced to the loss of H-2Kk antigen expression on these cells. The correlation between H-2Kk loss and immunoresistance in vivo suggests a central role for the cytotoxic T cell in in vivo tumor elimination in this system.  相似文献   

19.
A strain of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) showed a selective depression of T cell functions brought about by aging. Conversely, this strain had a high NK cell activity as compared to other normal rat strains. This SHR strain was found to be much more sensitive to the carcinogenic activity of low doses of MCA than were WKA rats with normal T cell functions. Allogeneic thymus grafts almost completely restored the T cell functions of SHR, whereas injection of an immunopotentiator, NSP, enhanced NK cell activity and also caused a partial recovering of T cell functions. When immunologic restoration was achieved, generation of killer T cells to syngeneic SMT-5 tumor cells was induced and the cytotoxic activity of NK cells to K-562 cells was also enhanced. But the cytotoxic activity to the SMT-5 cells of NK cells and macrophages from the treated or untreated SHR was not detected. Allogeneic thymus grafts induced a significant transplantation resistance against a syngeneic SMT-5 tumor and injection of NSP enhanced only the survival days of the rats. Allogeneic thymus grafts also significantly suppressed the incidence of tumors induced by MCA, whereas the injection of NSP was not effective in the prevention of tumor development but was effective in prolongation of latency periods. These results support the hypothesis that immune surveillance mediated by T cells is an important mechanism for the control of tumor development.  相似文献   

20.
In the 1990s, based on the results of studies using beta(2)M, CD4 or CD8 knockout mice, several groups reported that the main effector cells responsible for skin or organ allograft rejection were non-T, non-NK cells. Similarly, we demonstrated that in an animal model of transplantation of BALB/c (H-2(d)) skin onto or Meth A (H-2(d)) tumor cells into C57BL/6 (H-2(b)) mice, AIM, which expressed iNOS, IL-12, and IL-18, were the main effector cells and also that they were cytotoxic against syngeneic tumor cells. Here, we examined whether the same population of macrophages could react with two distinct types of target cell. When BALB/c skin or Meth A tumor cells were transplanted into C57BL/6 mice, cytotoxic activity against the allograft was induced in the transplantation site on days 5-14 and was recovered in non-adherent cells after a 20-min incubation in a serum-coated dish, suggesting the induction of a type of AIM (AIM-1) in the transplantation site. The AIM-1-expressing receptors for H-2D(d)K(d) antigens had no cytotoxic activity against syngeneic tumor cells. In contrast, AIM-2, which were recovered in the fraction adherent to the serum-coated dish, exhibited cytotoxic activities against various types of tumor cells, whereas they were inactive toward BALB/c skin. AIM expressed iNOS (AIM-1 < AIM-2), IL-12 (AIM-1 > AIM-2), and IL-18 (AIM-2 alone) mRNAs. These results indicate that after allografting, two distinct types of cytotoxic AIM were induced in the transplantation site, one against the allografted skin or tumor (AIM-1) and the other against allogeneic or syngeneic tumor cells (AIM-2).  相似文献   

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