The role of suppressor T cells in BCNU-mediated rejection of a syngeneic tumor.
Open Access
- 1 August 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 135 (2) , 1510-1517
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.135.2.1510
Abstract
The present investigation was initiated to determine the mechanism by which 1,3-bis(2-chloro-ethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) treatment of tumor-bearing mice results in a high percentage of surviving mice which are resistant to subsequent homologous tumor challenge. Spleen cells from C57BL/6 mice bearing the syngeneic LSA ascites tumor failed to demonstrate significant tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity when stimulated in vitro with irradiated tumor cells. This lack of CTL activity correlated with the presence and high activity of two types of CTL-regulatory suppressor T cells (Ts), tumor-specific Thy-1+, Lyt-1-2+ and tumor-nonspecific Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2+ cells, as demonstrated by a double-positive selection technique. In contrast, spleen cells from BCNU-treated tumor-bearing mice generated high tumor-specific CTL activity when stimulated in vitro with irradiated tumor cells. This CTL activity correlated with the lack of demonstrable tumor-specific Ts and greatly diminished tumor-nonspecific Ts activity. The tumor-specific helper activity of Thy-1+, Lyt-1+,2- cells was found to be similar in both BCNU-treated and untreated tumor-bearing mice. BCNU-treated mice that survived a primary LSA tumor challenge (referred to as BCNU-cured mice) resisted subsequent challenge with the homologous (LSA) but not with a heterologous syngeneic tumor (EL-4). However, rejection of a secondary challenge with LSA tumor by BCNU-cured mice was inhibited by adoptive transfer of spleen cells from either normal mice or mice bearing LSA tumors. Furthermore, LSA tumor cells that failed to evoke tumor-specific CTL activity in normal mice could induce high CTL activity in BCNU-cured mice. The present study suggests that, in addition to its direct tumoricidal activity, BCNU inhibits the induction of tumor-specific Ts, thereby explaining why a high percentage of mice survive a primary syngeneic tumor challenge after treatment with BCNU, and also resist subsequent rechallenge with the homologous tumor.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
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