Abstract

In previous reports, we demonstrated an inhibitory effect of a single low-dose of cyclophosphamide (Cy) on spontaneous and experimental metastasis of a rat lymphoma (L-TACB). This antimetastatic effect could be adoptively transferred by immune spleen cells from Cy-treated tumor-bearing rats and it was abrogated by the use of immunosuppressed hosts, suggesting an immunomodulatory effect. Subsequently, we found that increased levels of TGF-β, IL-10 and NO were involved in tumor-induced immunosuppression by inhibiting lymphocyte proliferation. The treatment of tumor-bearing rats with low-dose Cy reduced the splenic production of these suppressive cytokines, restoring the lymphoproliferative capacity otherwise diminished during tumor growth. Here, we investigated the changes of the cytokines modulated by the Cy therapy that are responsible for the restoration of the lymphoproliferative response and determined the spleen cell type producing TGF-β, IL-10 and NO in our experimental model. Our current results show that IL-10 and NO are produced exclusively by T lymphocytes and macrophages, respectively, whereas TGF-β is produced by both cell types. The high level of IL-10 produced by T-cells from tumor-bearing rats is responsible for the inhibition of lymphocyte proliferation. Moreover, our results suggest that the shift from immunosuppression to immunopotentiation induced by treatment of tumor-bearing rats with a single low-dose of Cy is mediated by a reduction in T-cell derived IL-10 production, which would account, to some extent, for the antimetastatic effect of Cy treatment.

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