Characterization of an immunosuppressive factor derived from colon cancer cells.

Abstract
The colon cancer cell line, HT29, produces a soluble substance (HT29 factor) that blocks mitogen-induced T cell proliferation and the production of interleukin 2 (IL 2). Inhibition of T cell proliferation by the HT29 factor is reversible and is not due to a decline in cell viability or an alteration in the kinetics of T cell proliferation. It occurs even when the HT29 factor is added only 24 hr before terminating the T cell cultures, indicating that the factor affects cell division after activation of T cells has already occurred. No inhibitory activity was found in medium conditioned by human colonic epithelial cells or fibroblasts. The factor has an apparent m.w. of 56,000 and an isoelectric point of 7.9. It is sensitive to endopeptidases, heating to 56 degrees C, and extremes of pH. The HT29 factor also suppresses IL 2 production by T cells. However, low IL 2 availability alone cannot account for the suppressive effect of the factor on T cell proliferation, because the addition of exogenous IL 2 does not reverse the inhibition. This block in IL 2 responsiveness is not primarily due to a decrease in IL 2 receptors because Tac expression on activated T cells is minimally decreased during a 24-hr exposure to the HT29 factor. In addition, IL 2-induced proliferation of mitogen-activated T cells is inhibited only slightly by the HT29 factor, indicating that a block in the interaction of IL 2 with its receptor is not its main mechanism of action. Thus the inhibition of T cell proliferation is likely to be due primarily to a mechanism independent of IL 2.

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