Abstract
Progressive growth of the P815 mastocytoma in an immunocompetent host evokes the generation of an antitumor immune response that can be measured in terms of the production of cytolytic Ly-1+2+ T cells in the draining lymph node and spleen. This immunity, designated concomitant immunity, is present on day 6 of tumor growth, peaks on day 9, and decays progressively thereafter. It fails to develop in mice made T cell deficient by thymectomy and lethal whole-body gamma-radiation, and reconstituted with syngeneic bone marrow cells (TXB mice). Employment of a mouse survival assay, capable of enumerating metastatic P815 cells in cell suspensions, showed that the P815 tumor metastasizes to the draining lymph node and spleen at the same rate in normal and TXB mice for the first 6 days of growth of an intradermal P815 tumor. By day 6 of tumor growth there were approximately 10(3) P815 cells in the draining lymph node in both types of mice. However, during the generation of concomitant immunity between days 6 and 9, the number of metastatic P815 cells in the draining lymph nodes and spleens of normal tumor-bearing mice declined by nearly 90%. After day 12, however, the number of tumor cells in the nodes and spleens increased concordantly with the decay of concomitant immunity. These findings, together with the demonstration that T cell-deficient mice failed to restrain the number of metastatic P815 cells in the draining lymph node and spleen, suggest that concomitant immunity is an important defense mechanism against the development of systemic disease. Additional evidence consistent with this interpretation was provided by studies which showed that adoptive immunization with spleen cells from concomitant immune donors significantly prolonged the median survival time of TXB tumor-bearing mice by destroying a substantial proportion of P815 tumor cells already seeded in the draining lymph node. Adoptive immunization also delayed the appearance of metastatic tumor cells in the spleen.