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1.
We have investigated the efficacy and immunologic characteristics of immune effector cells generated from cultures containing large numbers of viable tumor cells and interleukin 2 (IL 2) in the adoptive immunotherapy of experimentally induced pulmonary metastases from the newly developed, weakly immunogenic MCA 105 sarcoma in mice. The current culture conditions allowed increases of either normal or MCA 105 immune spleen cells up to 94-fold in 15 days. The in vitro expanded normal and MCA 105 immune cells displayed nonspecific in vitro cytotoxicity against several syngeneic tumor targets. However, therapeutically effective cells could only be obtained from cultures initiated with MCA 105 immune spleen cells. Immunotherapy with expanded immune effector cells could lead to the reduction of established 3 day pulmonary metastases, prolongation of survival, and cure of tumor in the majority of animals. The generation and proliferation of therapeutic effector cells in vitro depended on the presence in cultures of specific tumor stimulator cells as well as the presence of IL 2. Although immunotherapy with either fresh noncultured or secondarily in vitro-sensitized (IVS) MCA 105 immune spleen cells was immunologically specific, the efficacy of the adoptive cellular therapy with cultured but not fresh immune cells could be improved by the administration to tumor-bearing hosts of exogenous IL 2. In addition to numerical expansion, the IVS immune cells, on a per cell basis, afforded an eightfold to 10-fold increase in therapeutic efficacy when compared with fresh noncultured MCA 105 immune cells. Our results indicate that the current culture procedure induced in vitro antigenic stimulation and expansion of tumor-specific immune effector cells that was otherwise not possible by conventional mixed lymphocyte-tumor cultures.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
A newly induced syngeneic transplantable sarcoma, MCA 105, was used for studies of the biologic characteristics of fresh noncultured and secondarily in vitro sensitized (IVS) cells with antitumor reactivity. Fresh spleen cells harvested from mice immunized to the MCA 105 tumor by a mixture of viable tumor cells and Corynebacterium parvum exhibited no detectable cytotoxic activity to MCA 105 tumor targets in a 4-hr chromium-release assay, and adoptive transfer of these cells mediated the specific regression of established MCA 105 tumors. Phenotypic analysis of fresh, noncultured immune cells revealed that the therapeutically effective cells expressed both the Lyt-1 and the Lyt-2 T cell differentiation antigens. The therapeutic efficacy of fresh noncultured immune cells was not augmented by the concomitant administration of exogeneous interleukin 2 (IL 2). Secondary IVS of fresh immune cells with irradiated MCA 105 tumor stimulator cells resulted in the generation of tumor-specific cytotoxic effector cells. The generation of cytotoxic effector cells required Lyt-1+, 2+ cytotoxic precursor cells. Effective adoptive immunotherapy with these IVS immune cells, unlike fresh noncultured immune cells, depended on the concomitant administration of IL 2. Furthermore, the generation of therapeutically effective cells did not require the specific stimulation by MCA 105 tumor cells, because cultures of MCA 105 immune spleen cells with FBL-3 lymphoma cells in vitro also contained in vivo functional immune effector cells. These cells, however, possessed no detectable MCA 105 cytotoxic activity in vitro. Although this observation suggests that a noncytotoxic cell population is sufficient to initiate tumor regression in vivo, it does not exclude the possibility that cytolytic cells are generated in vivo after adoptive transfer of these cells. As a whole, our results indicate that secondary IVS functional immune effector cells are characteristically distinct from freshly harvested immune cells.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the effect of depletion of histamine-binding lymphoid cells on immunological properties of lymphocytes sensitized in culture against tumor cells. C57BL/6 spleen cells that were sensitized in vitro on monolayers of the syngeneic Lewis lung carcinoma (3LL) became cytotoxic to the tumor cells in vitro after 3 to 5 days of sensitization. Sensitized cells harvested after 4 days of sensitization occasionally enhanced tumor growth in vivo. Fractionation of the sensitized lymphocytes over insolubilized histamine-rabbit serum albumin-Sepharose (HRS) columns decreased or abolished the enhancing activity in vivo and specifically increased the in vitro cytotoxic activity of the depleted lymphocytes. A similar increase in the cytotoxic activity of HRS-fractionated cells was observed in an allogeneic combination of C57BL spleen cells sensitized against C3H fibroblasts. The effect of HRS chromatography on the in vitro cytotoxic activity increased with prolonged incubation of the depleted effector cells with the target cells.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The present study shows that natural killer cell-mediated cytotoxicity of BALB/c mouse spleen cells to syngeneic tumor cells was augmented by in vivo priming or in vitro stimulation with the streptococcal preparation OK432. The augmentation of spleen cell cytotoxicity to syngeneic tumor cells by in vivo priming alone with OK432 was lower than that obtained by in vitro stimulation alone with OK432. When the murine spleen cells primed in vivo with OK432 were rechallenged in vitro with OK432 at various intervals, the natural cytotoxicity was more strongly enhanced than that seen with in vitro stimulation alone. The cell surface phenotype of killer cells activated with OK432 was Thy 1+ and asialo GM inf1 sup+ , suggesting the activated natural killer cell. Next, mice were transplanted with syngeneic colon adenocarcinoma cells, and primed in vivo with OK432. These spleen cells were subsequently challenged in vitro with OK432. These spleen cells displayed a strong cytotoxic activity not only to the transplanted adenocarcinoma cells but also to other syngeneic tumor cells.  相似文献   

6.
Mouse spleen cells were cultured for 5 days with or without HRBC. Cultured cells were 'parked' in irradiated syngeneic recipients for 3 weeks and then tested for their immunologic reactivity in vitro. We found that spleen cells from recipients of HRBC-sensitized cells (S) as well as spleen cells from recipients of control unsensitized cells (U) possessed radiosensitive suppressor and radioresistant helper activities. Suppressor activity was observed by the capacity of unirradiated S and U spleen cells to inhibit the in vitro generation of IgM and IgG PFC by spleen cells primed in vivo to HRBC or to LacKLH. Helper activity was shown by the capacity of the irradiated S and U cells to restore IgM and IgG PFC responses of in vivo primed, T-depleted spleen cells to HRBC, LacHRBC, and LacCRBC. Both suppressor and helper activities were mediated by T cells. The possibilities that immunologically specific or nonspecific mechanisms account for these phenomena are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Mice were primed subcutaneously with trinitrophenyl (TNP)-modified syngeneic spleen cells. Seven days later, spleen cells from these in vivo primed mice, or spleen cells from naive mice, were co-cultured with TNP-modified syngeneic cells. Spleen cells from the in vivo primed mice demonstrated augmented cytolytic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity. The spleens of these in vivo primed mice contained a population of radioresistant, antigen-specific, helper T cells. Specifically, spleen cells from these mice, after x-irradiation, were able to augment the in vitro CTL response of normal spleen cells to TNP-modified syngeneic cells.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of suppressor T cells (Ts) on the induction and the subsequent development of memory T cells for delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) was examined. The memory cells were induced in the spleens of mice primed previously with a low dose of reduced and alkylated ovalbumin (Ra-OA), and they generated DTH-effector T cells (DTH-Te) in a significantly accelerated fashion when cultured with OA in vitro. Ts were obtained from the spleens of mice which received OA-coupled spleen cells i.v. 4 days previously, and they inhibited antigen-specifically the induction of DTH responses in the recipient mice sensitized with alum-absorbed OA only when transferred with 5 weeks before sensitization. The spleen cells from mice given Ts together with the priming antigen 7 weeks before culture failed to generate DTH-Te in an accelerated manner on restimulation with OA in vitro. The memory cells from primed mice also did not cause accelerated generation of DTH-Te, when cultured with Ts in the presence of OA in vitro. These results indicate that both the induction of the memory cells by priming with antigen in vivo and the subsequent development of memory cells to DTH-Te by restimulation in vitro are inhibited independently by Ts. This corresponded well with the effect of Ts on the development of DTH-memory in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Spleen cells from chickens 7 days after inoculation with Marek's disease virus (MDV) responded poorly to stimulation by phytohemagglutinin (PHA). Addition of these cells to syngeneic normal spleen cells caused of marked suppression of the PHA response of the normal cells. The MDV spleen cells also inhibited the DNA synthesis of MSB-1 lymphoblastoid cells in vitro. The suppressive activity is attributed to the presence in MDV spleen cells of a population of suppressor cells with characteristics typical of macrophages. The suppressor cell activity was not removable by treatment with anti-T or anti-B serum with C, but it was reversible by treatment with carrageenan or carbonyl iron/magnet, by passage through glass wool column, and by adherence to plastic Petri dishes. The adherent MDV spleen cells also showed strong suppressor cell activity against syngeneic normal spleen cells.  相似文献   

10.
The requirement of CGF in the generation of cytotoxic cells against syngeneic tumor cells (T-9) and in the rejection of transplanted T-9 cells has been investigated. Spleen cells obtained from sensitized rats showed strong cytotoxicity against 51Cr-labeled T-9 cells upon incubation with CGF for 48 hr. Human recombinant IL 2 and rat IFN failed to generate cytotoxic cells from spleen cells of sensitized rats. CGF are produced by spleen cells upon inoculation of T-9 cells into sensitized rats as a host in vivo immune response. Production of CGF preceded the appearance of cytotoxic cells in regional lymph node and tumor tissues. In those rats, inoculated tumor cells were eventually rejected. In contrast, spleen cells failed to produce CGF upon inoculation of T-9 cells in unsensitized rats. Cytotoxic cells were not detected in unsensitized rats, and inoculated tumor grew in those rats. Thus, CGF is likely to be involved in the generation of cytotoxic cells and in the rejection of inoculated syngeneic tumor cells. A Mono Q anion-exchange column with an FPLC system allowed the chromatographic separation of CGF from IL 1, IL 2, IL 3, and CSF.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Antigen-fed macrophages were able to induce specific sensitization of unprimed syngeneic lymphocytes in vitro. The sensitized lymphocytes caused specific injury to target cells that carried the relevant antigens. In the present study, we investigated the in vivo activity of lymphocytes sensitized by antigen-fed macrophages. Mouse spleen cells were sensitized by macrophages that had been exposed to the radiation leukemia virus (RadLV). The sensitized lymphocytes, which were enriched for T-cells, were injected to syngeneic normal recipients and 4 days later the mice were challenged with RadLV-induced lymphoma cells. By following tumor growth and survival of mice, we have found that the sensitized lymphocytes protected the recipient mice against lymphoma development if injected 4 days before the tumor cells. The protective activity of the sensitized lymphocytes was radioresistant, but they could not protect irradiated hosts. It is suggested that macrophagemediated in vitro sensitization of lymphocytes induces initiator cells that can protect the recipient host by recruitment of a defensive immune response.  相似文献   

12.
Previous work from this laboratory has revealed that spleen and/or lymph node cells from Lewis rats, that have recovered from an acute episode of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), suppress the development of EAE when injected into syngeneic recipients subsequently challenged with myelin basic protein (MBP) in CFA. In an effort to understand the mechanism of this suppression, we measured the production of immune IFN-gamma, which may be required for the induction of an immune response, by EAE effector T cells (which transfer disease) and EAE suppressor cells when cultured in vitro with MBP. We now report that EAE effector T cells produce IFN-gamma when cultured in vitro with MBP. In contrast, spleen cells from recovered rats (which manifest suppressor activity in vivo) do not produce IFN-gamma. Moreover, in cell mixing experiments, these suppressor spleen cells inhibited the production of IFN-gamma by EAE effector cells. This inhibition was not eliminated by the removal of macrophages nor by the inhibition of PG synthesis by indomethacin. Furthermore, the inhibition was shown to be Ag-specific and mediated by nylon-adherent, radiation-sensitive splenic T cells. The findings suggest that suppressor cells regulate EAE by inhibiting IFN-gamma production by effector cells. This inhibition may result in the down-regulation of IFN-gamma-induced expression of class II major histocompatibility Ag on cells of the central nervous system, thus reducing the presentation of tissue-specific Ag (i.e., MBP) to autoreactive lymphocytes.  相似文献   

13.
A/Jax mice were rendered immune to the syngeneic and transplantable methylcholanthrene-induced Sarcoma 1509a by the surgical removal of the tumor 7 days after implantation; subsequent injection i.v. transfer of 10(7) to 10(8) washed thymus or spleen cells of tumor-bearing animals (TBA) to immune animals significantly inhibited the rejection of the tumor; this suppressive effect was entirely abolished by the treatment of these lymphocytes with anti-theta serum or anti-thymocyte serum (ATS) and complement before adoptive transfer. On the other hand, an equal number of thymus or spleen cells of normal animals or of animals bearing an unrelated tumor had no suppressive effect. Treatment of normal syngeneic animals with ATS after tumor cell inoculation or splenectomy of TBA resulted in the suppression of the tumor growth. The serum of TBA had no effect on tumor growth in immune syngeneic mice. Together these results suggest that TBA possess immunosuppressor T cells regulating negatively their immune response to the tumor.  相似文献   

14.
Summary DBA/2 mice were immunized i.p. against syngeneic SL2 lymphosarcoma cells. At various days after the last immunization peritoneal and spleen lymphocytes were collected. The lymphocyte suspensions were enriched for T-cells by nylon wool filtration.The peritoneal T-cells from immunized mice (a) expressed direct specific antitumor cytotoxicity in vitro, (b) induced macrophage cytotoxicity in vitro, and (c) exerted tumor neutralization measured in a Winn-type assay. Spleen T-cells from these immunized mice (a) expressed no direct specific antitumor cytotoxicity in vitro, (b) only induced moderate macrophage cytotoxicity in vitro, but (c) exerted tumor neutralization in a Winn assay.For effective tumor neutralization in vivo effector target cell ratios of 1000:1 were required. When the effector/target ratio of 1000:1 was maintained but the absolute numbers of effector and target cells were lowered from 106 to 105 lymphocytes and 103 to 102 target cells respectively, no tumor neutralization was obtained.The major effect of the sensitized-transferred T-lymphocytes seemed to be the induction of cytotoxic macrophages in the (naive) recipient mice, as the peritoneal macrophages collected from the recipient mice 7 days after i.p. injection of a mixture of sensitized T-cells and tumor cells were cytotoxic. Purified peritoneal T-lymphocytes collected from these recipient mice were able to induce macrophage cytotoxicity in vitro but expressed no cytotoxic T-cell activity.In conclusion, our results show that in the tumor system used, tumor neutralization after transfer of sensitized lymphocytes is not dependent on the presence of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes. Lymphocytes with the strongest potency to render macrophages cytotoxic (in vitro and in vivo) also induce the best tumor neutralization in vivo, suggesting an important role for host macrophages as antitumor effector cells.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The effector mechanism of immune spleen cells against syngeneic TMT mammary tumor cells was analyzed in vitro. C3H/He mice were first inoculated with TMT tumor cells, and then the tumors were x-irradiated with 2000 rad 1 wk after the inoculation. Spleen cells from these treated mice inhibited the growth of tumor cells in vitro when assessed by (3H)-TdR incorporation by tumor cells (cytostatic activity). The same spleen cells did not have any cytotoxic activity on TMT tumor cells detected by a 51Cr-release assay. The cytostatic activity was mediated by Lyt-1+23- T cells. The purified T cells alone could not inhibit the growth of tumor cells, but accessory cells were required for the induction of cytostatic T cell activity. The accessory cells were Ia-positive, macrophage-like adherent cells. Furthermore, both T cells and macrophages were also required for the inhibition of tumor growth even after the spleen cells were activated in vitro. These results suggest T cells and macrophages play an important role in the effector mechanism against TMT mammary tumor cells. The mechanism of cytostasis by T cells and macrophages was discussed from the standpoint of the cellular interaction.  相似文献   

17.
Responding lymphoid cells cultured in vitro with irradiated trinotrophenyl (TNP)-modified syngeneic spleen cells develop direct cell-mediated cytotoxicity which is specific for target cells bearing both the TNP moiety and histocompatibility determinants of the modified sensitizing cell. Two subpopulations of normal mouse spleen cells have been shown to synergize in the in vitro generation of specific cell-mediated cytotoxicity to these "modified self" antigens. The synergizing populations are nylon wool column-adherent and column-nonadherent fractions of normal mouse spleen. When mixtures of these two cell populations are cultured in vitro with irradiated TNP-modified syngeneic spleen cells, greater cytotoxicity is generated in the two populations sensitized separately. The synergizing cell in the column-adherent population is resistant to lysis by rabbit anti-mouse brain serum, is distinct from the cytotoxic effector T lymphocyte, and is unresponsive to phytohemagglutinin; its synergizing function could not be replaced by peritoneal cells. These results suggest that it is a non-T cell which may be distinct from the macrophage.  相似文献   

18.
The allogeneic and syngeneic immune responses of tumor-bearing mice (C57BL/6 mice bearing 3LL and DBA mice bearing P815) were evaluated by the cytotoxic lymphocyte precursor unit (CLP-U) and MLC. In general, tumor-bearing mice showed slightly enhanced immune responses 4 days after tumor inoculation. This enhanced immune response rapidly declined and about 7–10 days after tumor inoculation, both allogeneic and syngeneic responses were markedly lower than normal. Mice treated with TP5, starting 2 weeks before tumor inoculation, retained normal or enhanced allogeneic and syngeneic responses up to 3 weeks after tumor inoculation. When this tumor-induced suppressive effect was studied in cell transfer experiments, spleen cells from tumor-bearing mice enhanced the growth of tumors in syngeneic recipients whereas spleen cells from TP5-treated mice inhibited the growth of tumors in syngeneic recipients. Moreover, the spleen cells from TP5-treated mice also showed enhanced cytotoxic activity against tumor cells in vitro. These findings suggest that the tumors, after a transient stimulatory phase, induced immune suppressive mechanisms in the hosts' immune defenses. Treatment with TP5 prevented the development of these immune suppressive effects and spleen cells from TP5-treated tumor-bearing mice inhibited tumor growth in freshly tumor-inoculated recipients.  相似文献   

19.
A Moloney leukemia virus-induced lymphoma of the A.SW strain, YWA, was used to generate cytotoxic cells in vitro. Cocultivation of spleen cells from in vivo primed syngeneic and semisyngeneic mice with X-irradiated YWA tumor cells for 5 days resulted in a strong killing activity against YWA. The cytotoxicity was H-2 restricted and mediated by Thy-1.2-positive lymphocytes. F1 hybrids with variable degrees of natural resistance to the YWA tumor in vivo all generated cytotoxic cells after secondary stimulation in vitro but showed differences in optimal responder:stimulator requirements.  相似文献   

20.
An in vitro method for the generation of effector suppressor cells (Ts3) was developed. By utilizing this protocol, it was possible to investigate both the cellular and genetic requirements for suppressor cell induction. It was determined that populations containing Ts3 cells can be induced after a 4-day culture of spleen cells and antigen. These Ts3 cells are similar to Ts3 cells generated by in vivo immunization. Both populations are I-J+, bind NP hapten, bind NP hapten, bear receptors which share NPb idiotypic determinants with anti-NP antibodies, function during the effector phase of the immune response, and require activation with Ts2 cells. Generation of Ts3-containing populations required both nylon wool-nonadherent T cells and a nylon-adherent, B cell-enriched population from an Igh-identical donor. T cells cultured with antigen alone or with syngeneic macrophages and antigen did not develop suppressive activity. Lytic treatment of the nylon-adherent population with a B cell-specific monoclonal antibody (J11d) removed the ability to generate suppressor cells. These results imply that the induction of suppressor T cells requires B lymphocytes, and that this induction process is dependent on Igh-linked gene products.  相似文献   

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