Abstract

The contribution of tumor associated macrophage (TAM) to the induction of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I expression in vivo has not been reported precisely. In this study, we utilized Interleukin-2 (IL-2) cDNA-introduced B16 melanoma cells (B16/IL-2) and vehicle-alone control cells (B16/mock) to examine whether TAM could contribute to the induction of MHC class I on B16 cells in vivo. Interestingly, although B16/mock and B16/IL-2 did not express MHC class I in vitro, MHC class I was strongly expressed in vivo in B16/IL-2 in comparison to B16/mock. Although in vivo treatment of anti-NK1.1 antibody abolished MHC expression in B16/mock in vivo, the same treatment did not influence MHC expression in B16/IL-2. Interestingly, both anti-asialo GM1 and anti-CD11b treatment strongly decreased MHC expression in B16/IL-2. TAM expressed both asialo GM1 and CD11b antigen, and TAM recovered from B16/IL-2 produced interferon gamma (IFNgamma) 6 times more than that from B16/mock. In addition, TAM recovered from B16/IL-2 secreted 33.64 times more IFNgamma in response to in vitro administration of IL-2. Therefore, we checked whether or not IL-2 could influence the expression of IL-2 receptors. TAM recovered from IL-2 expressed middle affinity receptor of IL-2 (CD122 and CD132) while that from B16/mock expressed low affinity receptor (CD25 and CD132). Finally, we observed that B16 cells became apoptotic with IFNgamma treatment in vitro. These results suggested that IL-2 augmented activation of TAM would play the main role in induction of the MHC class I molecule through secretion of IFNgamma, and would contribute to the IFNgamma-mediated apoptosis induction in tumor cells.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call