Abstract

Daily IFN-alpha/beta therapy was totally ineffective in inhibiting the development of visceral metastases in DBA/2 mice injected i.v. with the ESb lymphoma regardless of the number of tumor cells injected. The finding that IFN-alpha/beta therapy increased the survival time of ESb-immunized mice rechallenged with ESb cells suggested that cooperation between the immune system and IFN-alpha/beta was important. Adoptive transfer of Esb-immune spleen cells (but not normal cells) together with IFN-alpha/beta treatment did inhibit the development of ESb metastases in immunocompetent DBA/2 mice. Either treatment alone was ineffective. The anti-metastatic effect was specific for the ESb lymphoma as spleen cells from ESb-immunized mice together with IFN-alpha/beta treatment did not inhibit the development of metastases in mice challenged with IFN-alpha/beta-resistant 3C18 FLC. Depletion of CD8+ T cells (but not CD4+ T cells or B lymphocytes) prior to transfer eliminated the protective effect of ESb-immune splenocytes in IFN-alpha/beta-treated mice. As few as 1 x 10(6) ESb-immune spleen cells highly enriched for CD8+ cells increased the survival time of IFN-alpha/beta-treated ESb-challenged DBA/2 mice. The combined therapy of ESb-specific immune cells and IFN-alpha/beta resulted in long-term immunity to this tumor.

Full Text
Paper version not known

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