Suppression of T-cell Response in Autologous Mixed Lymphocyte-Tumor Culture by Large Granular Lymphocytes2
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
- Vol. 76 (3) , 389-398
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/76.3.389
Abstract
The role of large granular lymphocytes (LGL) in the autologous mixed lymphocyte-tumor culture (MLTC) was studied in cancer patients with malignant pleural effusions. When blood lymphocytes were cocultured in vitro with autologous tumor cells freshly isolated from carcinomatous pleural effusions, [3H]thymidine incorporation was weakly stimulated on day 6 in 6 of 30 samples. Removal of LGL from the responder population by treatment with the Leu-7 or Leu-11 b monoclonal antibody plus complement (C′) induced or augmented the proliferative response. LGL and small T-lymphocytes were isolated by discontinuous Percoll gradient centrifugation and tested separately for the proliferative response to autologous tumor. T-cells proliferated in 24 of 30 cases, while LGL showed no proliferation. Addition of LGL to autologous mixed T-cell-tumor cultures suppressed the proliferation of T-cells, LGL, however, did not inhibit T-cell proliferation induced by allomtigens and lectins. The suppressive activity of Percoll-purified LGL was not reduced by OKT3 plus C′ treatment, but it was totally abrogated by Leu-11b plus C′. Supernatants produced by 24-hour culture of LGL with autologous tumor contained soluble factors that suppressed the autologous MLTC without killing the autologous tumor or T-blasts. The LGL-mediated suppression was not abolished by anti-interferon-α or anti-interferon-γ antibody. Activation of T-cells in the autologous MLTC induced lytic potentiar restricted to autologous tumor. In the presence of LGL, T-cells failed to develop autotumor killing activity. Once autotumor killer T-cells were generated in autologous MLTC, their cytotoxicity was no longer inhibited by LGL. These results indicate that LGL from patients with carcinomatous pleural effusions suppress the capacity of autotumor-recognizing T-lymphocytes to proliferate and develop autotumor cytotoxicity in the autologous MLTC. This could explain why fresh T-cells have no cytolytic activity to autologous tumor.Keywords
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