Lewis lung carcinoma (3LL) cells treated in vitro with ultraviolet radiation show reduced metastatic ability due to an augmented immunogenicity
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Clinical & Experimental Metastasis
- Vol. 5 (1) , 43-56
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00116625
Abstract
The metastatic ability of 3LL tumor following in vitro irradiation with ultraviolet (u.v.) light was studied. Tumor cells were exposed to two courses of u.v.-irradiation (3LL × 2u.v. cells) and after two weeks of culture they were inoculated intravenously (i.v.) into syngeneic mice. These cells produced significantly fewer pulmonary metastases than the untreated population. In addition, intrafootpad (i.f.p.) injections of 3LL × 2u.v. cells into immunocompetent animals induced tumors only in 40 per cent of recipients. Interestingly, in normal mice with progressively growing 3LL × 2u.v. tumors, the formation of spontaneous pulmonary metastases was prevented, whereas metastatic foci were observed in 70 per cent of the nude recipients. The metastatic properties of u.v.-treated tumor cells were further analysed by using individual clones with varying immunogenicity. We found that variants with augmented immunogenicity also showed a parallel decrease in metastatic potential. Studies on H-2 antigen expression in different clones revealed that immunogenic and low metastatic variants expressed levels of H-2 antigens higher than the tumorigenic and metastatic clones. Finally, by using cyclophosphamide (Cy) treatment and adoptive transfer of immune spleen cells we were able to eradicate macroscopic 3LL pulmonary metastasis. These results demonstrate that the decrease of metastatic ability in u.v.-treated cells was mainly due to an increase in their immunogenicity and H-2 antigen expression.Keywords
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