|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Interleukin-4 is effective in restoring cytotoxic T cell activity that declines during in vivo progression of a murine B lymphoma.

First Author  Santra S Year  1997
Journal  Cancer Immunol Immunother Volume  44
Issue  5 Pages  291-300
PubMed ID  9247564 Mgi Jnum  J:41763
Mgi Id  MGI:894449 Doi  10.1007/s002620050385
Citation  Santra S, et al. (1997) Interleukin-4 is effective in restoring cytotoxic T cell activity that declines during in vivo progression of a murine B lymphoma. Cancer Immunol Immunother 44(5):291-300
abstractText  We previously reported [Chakrabarti et al. (1992) Cell Immunol 142:54; 144:455] that, in a murine B lymphoma model 2C3, idiotype (Id)-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) are generated in mice following hyperimmunization with irradiated tumor cells, and that they are effective in tumor rejection. The present study reveals that 2C3-specific CTL are also induced in spleens during tumor progression, but are not sustained. At the early stage of tumor growth, the splenic T cells following a 5-day incubation in vitro with killed 2C3 tumor targets, produce high levels of cytokines, namely interleukin-4 (IL-4), IL-10 and interferon gamma (IFN gamma). Their cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity and cytokine levels, except IL-2, sharply decline at the late stage when the mice are increasingly moribund. Although the decline in cytokine level is also evident with CD4+ T cells, a precipitous and concurrent decrease occurs primarily in the IL-4 level with both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of late-tumor-bearing animals (TBA). Study with the unseparated splenocytes also reveals that sevenfold less IL-4 is produced at the late stage. Furthermore, the cytotoxicity of CTL from late TBA can be effectively restored by addition of supernatants from the splenocyte culture of early TBA, or by IL-4, but not by IFN gamma and IL-10. In addition, only IL-4-activated CD8+ T cells from the late TBA are found, by Winn assay, to be protective in vivo. Thus it appears that IL-4, required to sustain antitumor CTL activity, is consumed by T and possibly other cells at the late stage of tumor growth, thereby compromising host immunity against the tumor. We contend that induction or maintenance of protective immunity depends not only on the tumor antigen but also on the specific cytokine milieu in a tumor-bearing host.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

2 Authors

0 Bio Entities

0 Expression