Abstract
Patients with gliomas exhibit deficient in vitro and in vivo T cell immune activity, and human glioblastoma culture supernatants (GCS) inhibit in vitro T lymphocyte responses. Because APC are essential for initiating and regulating T cell responses, we investigated whether GCS would affect cytokines produced by monocytes and T cells from healthy donors of PBMC. Incubation of PBMC with GCS decreased production of IL-12, IFN-γ, and TNF-α, and increased production of IL-6 and IL-10. The GCS-induced changes in IL-12 and IL-10 occurred in monocytes, and involved changes in IL-12 p40 and IL-10 mRNA expression. Incubation with GCS also resulted in reduced expression of MHC class II and of CD80/86 costimulatory molecules on monocytes. The immunosuppressive effects were not the result of IL-6 or TGF-β1 that was detected in GCS. However, it was due to a factor(s) that is resistant to pH extremes, differentially susceptible to temperature, susceptible to trypsin, and has a minimum molecular mass of 40 kDa. Our findings show that glioblastoma-generated factors that are known to suppress T cell responses alter the cytokine profiles of monocytic APC that, in turn, inhibit T cell function. This model indicates that monocytes can serve as an intermediate between tumor-generated immune-suppressive factors and the T cell responses that are suppressed in gliomas.
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CITATION STYLE
Zou, J.-P., Morford, L. A., Chougnet, C., Dix, A. R., Brooks, A. G., Torres, N., … Shearer, G. M. (1999). Human Glioma-Induced Immunosuppression Involves Soluble Factor(s) That Alters Monocyte Cytokine Profile and Surface Markers. The Journal of Immunology, 162(8), 4882–4892. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.162.8.4882
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