Poly I:C activated macrophages are tumoricidal for TNF-alpha-resistant 3LL tumor cells.

  • Remels L
  • Fransen L
  • Huygen K
  • et al.
30Citations
Citations of this article
5Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Successive coculture of Lewis lung carcinoma (3LL) cells with T cell-derived lymphokines and LPS-activated macrophages has led to the acquisition of 3LL tumor variants (macrophage-resistant 3LL tumor variants (3LL-R)), manifesting a highly reduced sensitivity to the cytotoxic potential of T cell-derived lymphokines and LPS-activated macrophages and TNF-alpha. However, when 3LL-R cells are cocultured with Poly I:C-activated macrophages or with conditioned medium derived from these effector cells a significant lysis is observed. TNF-alpha participates in the cytolytic process of Poly I:C-activated macrophages as anti-TNF-alpha antibodies abolish the cytotoxic effect of these effector cells. In addition, class I IFN is involved because IFN-alpha and IFN-beta act synergistically on TNF-alpha mediated lysis of 3LL-R cells within 18 h. Moreover, anticlass I IFN antibodies abolish the cytolytic capacity of Poly I:C-activated macrophages. Hence, Poly I:C-induced macrophage-mediated cytolysis of 3LL-R cells may result from 1) the induction of macrophages by Poly I:C to secrete high amounts of TNF-alpha and class I IFN and 2) a synergism between IFN-alpha/IFN-beta and TNF-alpha on lysis of 3LL-R cells. This synergism does not result from a class I IFN-mediated enhancement of TNF-alpha receptor expression on 3LL-R cells. Therefore, the sensitivity of 3LL-R cells to TNF-alpha-mediated lysis in the presence of class I IFN is most probably regulated at the post-TNF-alpha receptor level. Furthermore, treatment of mice with Poly I:C strongly reduces the metastatic capacity of 3LL-R tumor cells, suggesting the participation of macrophages in the eradication of the established metastasis. Hence, TNF-alpha-resistant 3LL-R tumor cells may serve as a useful tool for the detection of alternative macrophage-related cytotoxins leading to the destruction of neoplastic cells both in vitro and in vivo.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Remels, L., Fransen, L., Huygen, K., & De Baetselier, P. (1990). Poly I:C activated macrophages are tumoricidal for TNF-alpha-resistant 3LL tumor cells. The Journal of Immunology, 144(11), 4477–4486. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.144.11.4477

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free