Abstract

Some T cell-dependent immune parameters were examined in mice bearing a large MOPC-315 plasmacytoma before and after treatment with a low dose (15 mg/kg) of CY. Prior to CY therapy, spleen cells from mice bearing a large MOPC-315 tumor were depressed in their ability to generate an in vitro cytotoxic response to the MOPC-315 tumor, to a different syngeneic plasmacytoma, MOPC-104E, and to an allogeneic thymoma, EL4. The spleen cells of these mice were also depressed in their ability to proliferate in response to the T cell mitogen PHA. Following CY therapy, the spleen cells generated an enhanced anti-MOPC-315 cytotoxic response by day 2, and the level of this response continued to increase so that by day 7, it was greatly enhanced and was much greater than the response of normal spleen cells. The recovery of the cytotoxic responsiveness to the antigenically related MOPC-104E tumor after CY therapy followed a similar pattern. In contrast, the spleen cells of these animals remained depressed in their cytotoxic response to the antigenically unrelated EL4 thymoma for at least 11 days after CY therapy. Although the anti-EL4 response recovered by day 14, the level of antitumor cytotoxicity generated did not exceed that generated by normal spleen cells. The PHA response remained greatly depressed in CY-treated MOPC-315 tumor bearers, even 14 days after the chemotherapy. Thus, at a time following low-dose CY therapy, when potent T cell-dependent antiplasmacytoma immunity had completed the eradication of a large MOPC-315 tumor burden not eliminated through the direct effect of the drug, the T cell-dependent response to an unrelated tumor and to PHA remained depressed.

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