Abstract

Macrophage activation for tumor cell killing is a multistep pathway in which responsive macrophages interact sequentially with priming and triggering stimuli in the acquisition of full tumoricidal activity. Although this synergistic response of normal macrophages to sequential incubation with activation signals has been well established, characterization of the intermediate stages in this pathway has been difficult, due in large measure to the instability of the intermediate cell phenotypes. We have developed a model system for examination of macrophage-mediated tumor cell lysis, with the use of the murine macrophage tumor cell line RAW 264.7. These cells, like normal macrophages, exhibit a strict requirement for interaction with both interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma, the priming signal) and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS, the triggering signal) in the development of tumor cytolytic activity. In this system, the priming effects of IFN-gamma decay rapidly after withdrawal of this mediator and the cells become unresponsive to LPS triggering. We have recently observed that gamma-irradiation of the RAW 264.7 cells also results in development of a primed activation state for tumor cell killing. The effects of gamma-radiation on the RAW 264.7 cell line are strikingly similar to those resulting from incubation with IFN-gamma, with the exception that the irradiation-induced primed cell intermediate is stable and responsive to LPS triggering for at least 24 hr. Treatment with gamma-radiation also results in increased cell surface expression of major histocompatibility complex-encoded class I antigens; however, class II antigen expression is not induced. Irradiation-induced development of the primed phenotype is not solely the result of cytostatic effects as treatment of the cells with a radiomimetic drug, mitomycin C, results in decreases in [3H]thymidine incorporation that are similar to those observed after irradiation, without concomitant development of cytolytic potential. In addition, priming by gamma-radiation does not appear to be mediated by the release of soluble autoregulatory factors. This alternate pathway for induction of the primed macrophage activation state should serve as a useful tool for identification of molecules important to the functional potential of primed cells, and for elucidation of the biochemical mechanisms of the priming event in tumoricidal activation.

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