Abstract

Carcinomatous pleural effusions of 18 of 20 patients with lung cancer contained suppressor cell precursors that could be activated by concanavalin A (Con A) to suppress the proliferative responses of autologous and allogeneic lymphocytes to phytohemagglutinin and Con A. However, pleural effusion cells showed no suppressor function without prior activation by Con A. In contrast, the peripheral blood of the cancer patients exhibiting impaired mitogenic response contained nonspecific spontaneous suppressor cells capable of inhibiting the lymphoproliferative response to mitogens without prior activation by Con A, but these cells were not able to show further suppressor function even after activation by Con A. The maximum suppression was observed after 48-h treatment of lymphocytes with optimally mitogenic doses of Con A. The Con A-inducible suppressor cells of the pleural effusion and spontaneous suppressor cells of the peripheral blood of cancer patients had the same characteristics with regard to the capacity to suppress the mitogenic responses of autologous and allogeneic lymphocytes, belonging to the group of nylon wool-nonadherent T cells and being sensitive to in vitro culture and resistant to treatment with mitomycin C.

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