INVITRO MIGRATION OF LYMPHOCYTES THROUGH COLLAGEN MATRIX - ARRESTED LOCOMOTION IN TUMOR-INFILTRATING LYMPHOCYTES
- 15 November 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 50 (22) , 7153-7158
Abstract
Antitumor immunity requires (a) extravasation of lymphocytes from the blood stream to interstitium, (b) locomotion through extracellular matrix to the site of tumor, (c) effector cell recognition of the tumor target with cell/cell contact and binding of adhesion receptors, (d) T-cell receptor binding to histocompatibility and tumor antigens, and (e) tumor cell lysis. We hypothesize that the tumor microenvironment inhibits lymphocyte locomotion through extracellular matrix as one mechanism by which tumors may avert host defense. Lymphocyte locomotion was investigated in vitro using a three-dimensional collagen gel model. Fresh tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) were obtained by enzymatic digestion of melanomas and renal cell carcinoma, and mononuclear cells were isolated by discontinuous Ficoll-Hypaque gradient. The lymphocytes were analyzed for motility from a point of origin between basal and overlay layers of collagen gel. Results showed that TIL migration was almost completely inhibited, compared with migration of normal and cancer patient peripheral blood leukocytes and lymphocytes from lymph nodes. Short-term (24-h) exposure of lymphocytes to cytokines during the assay in the collagen gel matrix had no effect on locomotor ability. Long-term (19, 30, or 35 days) culture of TIL in 200 units/ml of interleukin 2 reinstated locomotor ability. Short-term exposure of any of the lymphocyte populations to interleukin 1-.alpha., interleukin 1-.beta., interleukin 2, interleukin 3, interleukin 4, .alpha.-interferon, or .gamma.-interferon had no effect on migration. Thus, TIL display a uniquely arrested ability to locomote through collagen gel. Inhibition of the locomotion of infiltrating effector cells is possibly a mechanism by which the tumor evades the host immune system.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- INVASION OF COLLAGEN GELS BY MOUSE LYMPHOID-CELLS1984
- Lymphocyte migration into three-dimensional collagen matrices: a quantitative study.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Lymphocyte recognition of lymph node high endothelium. IV. Cell surface structures mediating entry into lymph nodes.The Journal of Immunology, 1982
- Lumen formation by epithelial cell lines in response to collagen overlay: a morphogenetic model in culture.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1982
- Extracellular matrix materials influence quail neural crest cell differentiation in vitroDevelopmental Biology, 1982
- Lymphocyte locomotion and attachment on two-dimensional surfaces and in three-dimensional matricesThe Journal of cell biology, 1982
- LYMPHOCYTE TRAFFIC THROUGH CHRONIC INFLAMMATORY LESIONS - DIFFERENTIAL MIGRATION VERSUS DIFFERENTIAL RETENTION1981
- A comparison of lymphocyte migration through intestinal lymph nodes, subcutaneous lymph nodes, and chronic inflammatory sites of sheepGastroenterology, 1980
- Lymphocyte traffic through granulomas: Differences in the recovery of indium-111-labeled lymphocytes in afferent and efferent lymphCellular Immunology, 1980
- Locomotion of human lymphoid cellsCellular Immunology, 1977