Resistance of neoplasms to immunological destruction: role of a macrophage chemotaxis inhibitor.
Open Access
- 1 July 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 148 (1) , 93-102
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.148.1.93
Abstract
Several tissue culture lines of 6C3HED, a murine lymphoma, were more susceptible to immunologic destruction in vivo than the highly virulent 6C3HED line maintained by serial intramuscular transplantation. The attenuated tissue culture cells were rejected by normal syngeneic recipients, but thymectomized mice were unable to reject attenuated cells. In such mice, the growth rate of attenuated cells was equivalent to the growth rate of virulent cells in normal syngeneic mice. The increased susceptibility of attenuated cells to destruction by syngeneic hosts was shown to correlate with decreased production by the tumor cells of a macrophage chemotaxis inhibitor, and not with altered antigen density. In addition, when inhibitor isolated from virulent cells was administered to mice challenged with attenuated cells, the latter cells became virulent in vivo. When attenuated and virulent cells were administered simultaneously in the same host, the attenuated cells were able to develop into progressively growing tumors. The data suggest that the successful growth of neoplastic cells in normal may require tumor cells to produce factors which subvert the ability of the host to mobilize macrophages rapidly at the tumor site.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Macrophage migratory dysfunction in cancer. A mechanism for subversion of surveillance.1977
- INHIBITION OF MACROPHAGE CHEMOTAXIS BY NEOPLASTIC AND OTHER RAPIDLY PROLIFERATING CELLS INVITRO1977
- ANTIBODY-MEDIATED SUPPRESSION OF TUMOR-GROWTH .3. MOLECULAR ASSAY OF MURINE IGG1 ALLOANTIBODY REQUIRED TO CAUSE TUMOR SUPPRESSION INVIVO1977
- Immunosuppression and the Role of Suppressive Factors in CancerAdvances in Cancer Research, 1977
- Depression of Macrophage Function by a Factor Produced by Neoplasms: A Mechanism for Abrogation of Immune SurveillanceThe Journal of Immunology, 1976
- An Inhibitor of Macrophage Chemotaxis Produced by NeoplasmsScience, 1976
- Antiinflammatory Effects of Murine Malignant CellsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1974
- The Role of Macrophages in Defense Against Neoplastic DiseaseAdvances in Cancer Research, 1974
- The immune recognition of TA3 tumors, its facilitation by endotoxin, and abrogation by ascites fluid.1972
- Further studies in vitro of transplantable mouse lymphosarcoma MB (T 86157).1952