| First Author | Zou JP | Year | 1995 |
| Journal | Int Immunol | Volume | 7 |
| Issue | 7 | Pages | 1135-45 |
| PubMed ID | 8527411 | Mgi Jnum | J:26782 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:74214 | Doi | 10.1093/intimm/7.7.1135 |
| Citation | Zou JP, et al. (1995) Systemic administration of rIL-12 induces complete tumor regression and protective immunity: response is correlated with a striking reversal of suppressed IFN-gamma production by anti-tumor T cells. Int Immunol 7(7):1135-45 |
| abstractText | Unfractionated spleen cells taken from tumor-bearing mice 2 weeks after tumor implantation contained tumor-primed T cells which produced cytokines including IL-2 and IFN-gamma when cultured in vitro. With progressive tumor growth this initial lymphokine-producing capacity decreased. Here, we investigated the ability of IL-12 to (i) restore suppressed IFN-gamma production, (ii) cause tumor regression and (ii) induce anti-tumor protective immunity. Addition of rIL-12 to spleen cell cultures from 4- to 10-week-old tumor-bearing mice resulted in a striking enhancement in the production of IFN-gamma compared with cultures of these cells in the absence of rIL-12 or of normal spleen cells in the presence of rIL-12. Five i.p. injections of rIL-12 into mice bearing s.c. tumors induced complete tumor regression. This was found when rIL-12 was given at early (1-2 weeks), intermediate (4-5 weeks) or even late (7 weeks) stages of tumor growth. Furthermore, IL-12-treated mice which rejected the primary tumor exhibited complete resistance to a rechallenge with the same tumor but did not reject a second syngenetic tumor. Immunohistochemical analyses following IL-12 treatment revealed that CD4+ and CD8+ T cells infiltrate the tumor. More importantly, IFN-gamma mRNA expression was observed in fresh tumor masses from tumor-bearing mice receiving IL-12 treatment. The importance of IFN-gamma was further demonstrated by the observation that the systemic administration of anti-IFN-gamma mAb prior to IL-12 treatment completely abrogated the anti-tumor effect of IL-12. Thus, these results indicate that administration of modest levels of rIL-12 to tumor-bearing mice results in tumor regression through mechanisms involving reversal of suppressed IFN-gamma production by anti-tumor T cells and the establishment of a tumor-specific protective immune response. |