Abstract

In an attempt to facilitate the long-term proliferative growth and subsequent cloning of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL's) against syngeneic murine 203-glioma (20-methylcholanthrene-induced ependymoblastoma of C57BL/6 mouse origin), sensitized T lymphocytes from tumor-bearing mice were cultured in the presence of T cell growth factor (TCGF). Of five clones established by a limiting dilution technique, two clones (G-CTLL 1 and 2) exhibited tumor-specific cytotoxicity. G-CTLL 1 cells, which possessed much higher cytotoxic activity than G-CTLL 2 cells, were further analyzed. G-CTLL 1 cells were maintained in a TCGF-dependent exponential proliferative culture for over 18 months and continued to mediate an extremely high cytotoxic activity with the target specificity (50- to 100-fold increases over the peak cytotoxic activity of sensitized T lymphocytes in tumor-bearing mice). Their phenotypes of surface antigens were Thy-1+ (weak positive), Lyt-1.-2.+3+, and asialo-GM1-, and their cytotoxicity was blocked by adding only anti-Lyt-2 monoclonal antibodies. These results indicated that the cloned cells originated from CTL's. The cloned cells were characterized by the production of immune interferon with the glioma antigen-stimulation, suggesting that the immune interferon could enhance the cytotoxic activity of the CTL clone at the site of a clone-target cell recognition event.

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