Production of colony-stimulating factor by tumor cells and the factor-mediated induction of suppressor cells.
Open Access
- 15 July 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 141 (2) , 699-708
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.141.2.699
Abstract
Spleen mononuclear cells of C3H/HeN mice were cultivated with mitomycin C-treated tumor cells, X5563, MH134, MM48, MM46, and FM3A/R, all of which were of syngeneic origin, in a medium containing normal syngeneic mouse serum but not FCS. There was a proliferative response to X5563, MH134, and MM48, but not to the two other tumor cells, MM46 and FM3A/R. The responder spleen cells were found to be nonadherent cells with a phenotype of Thy-1-L3T4-Lyt2-Ig-Macl-, which were neither mature T and B cells nor mature macrophage/granulocytes. It was also found that the proliferation of these nonadherent no-marker cells was mediated by tumor cell-derived soluble factors but not by direct stimulation with tumor cells. The responsible factor was a molecule(s) with a Mr of 23 to 25 kDa, which had a CSF activity inducing granulocyte (G)-, macrophage (M)- and G + M-colonies in the bone marrow cells. Neutralization tests of this factor-induced proliferation of spleen cells revealed that a major part of the factor may be GM-CSF or a molecule closely related to it. Incubation of spleen mononuclear cells with these GM-CSF-like tumor cell factors resulted in induction of myeloblastic/promyelocytic cells with a phenotype of Mac-1+2+Ia+ Thy-1-L3T4-Lyt2-Ig- in the spleen cell cultures, which could suppress mitogenic responses of the spleen cells to T and B cell mitogens. GM-CSF-like activity could also be detected in the serum of mice bearing X5563, MH134, and MM48, but not in those bearing MM46 and FM3A/R. Subcutaneous inoculation of C3H/HeN mice with these X5563, MH134, and MM48 tumor cells generated massive metastasis in the lung and lymph nodes, whereas MM46 and FM3A/R produced no macroscopic tumor cell metastasis. These results strongly suggest the possibility that in some tumor cell-host systems, a GM-CSF-like factor(s) produced constitutively by the tumor cells may play an important role in the development of tumor metastasis, mediating through suppression of lymphoid tissues of the host.This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
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