A nonspecific inhibitor of leukocyte migration in serum from rats bearing large fibrosarcomata. |
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Authors: | M Schechter H Moroson |
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Affiliation: | Radiobiology Division, Department of Radiology, New York Medical College, New York, New York 10029 USA |
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Abstract: | A 3 M KCl crude extract of the syngeneic benzpyrene-induced fibrosarcoma termed BP 238 specifically inhibits migration out of glass capillary tubes of immune spleen cells from tumor amputee and small tumor-bearing rats, as does supernatant medium from tumor cells grown in culture. Serum from rats bearing small (< 2 cm3) tumors does not inhibit migration of immune spleen cells, while serum from rats with larger tumors (>4 cm3) nonspecifically inhibits migration of both immune and nonimmune spleen cells, thoracic duct lymphocytes, and thymocytes. This nonspecific inhibition increases with increasing tumor size, does not correlate with the presence of bacterial infection, and is presumably due to a circulating factor produced in vivo during tumor growth. Production of macrophage inhibitory-like factor (MILF) by neoplasms in vivo may offer a mechanism for tumors to escape immunosurveillance by systemic immobilization of cytotoxic lymphocytes. From Sephadex and ultrafiltration fractionation experiments, the molecular weight of MILF in serum is polydisperse (30,000–100,000 daltons), and is heat and chymotrypsin resistant, in contrast with the properties reported for LIF (leukocyte inhibitory factor) and MIF (macrophage migration inhibitory factor) produced in vitro. |
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Keywords: | To whom requests for reprints should be sent. |
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