Abstract

The present studies explored the role of adherent cells in tumor immunity. Lymph node cells from mice bearing large tumors appeared to be maximally stimulated in vivo and incapable of further stimulation by cells of the same tumor in vitro. Removal of the adherent cell population resulted in a marked decrease in the spontaneous background activity of the remaining nonadherent cells and allowed these cells to undergo stimulation when cultured in the presence of mitomycin-blocked tumor cells. The role of the adherent cell in the maintenance of a state of continuous stimulation was further elucidated by experiments in which lymph node cell populations were reconstituted from the adherent and nonadherent subpopulations. It was also shown that adherent lymphoid cells from tumor-bearing mice, but not from normal mice, were capable of stimulating tumor-immune lymphocytes in a manner similar to intact mitomycin-blocked tumor cells.

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