Abstract

Surgical specimens of lung cancers were examined immunopathologically for the expression of major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) antigens in the tumor cells and their relationship to the lymphocytic infiltration. A lymphocytic infiltrate was frequently observed in the tumor tissue, though its intensity differed among the various histological types. MHC-II antigens were often demonstrated in tumors with a lymphocytic infiltrate. They were detected predominantly in the cytoplasm of tumor cells and to a lesser extent on the cell membranes. The emergence of the MHC-II-positive tumor cells was closely related to a local infiltration by lymphocytes including interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-producing T-cells. On the basis of the histological findings, an in vitro experiment was carried out. Four types of lung cancer cells were incubated with recombinant IFN-gamma in order to induce MHC-II antigens. MHC-II antigens (HLA-DR as well as HLA-DQ and HLA-DP antigens) were elicited in three cancer cell lines depending on the concentration of IFN-gamma. Immunoelectron microscopic study revealed that they were expressed on the surface of the cell membrane, though to a lesser extent than in the cytoplasm. It was considered that MHC-II antigens could be induced in some tumor cells in the immunological environment where IFN-gamma was secreted from T-cells and concentrated locally.

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