Identification of Tumor-Infiltrating Macrophages as the Killers of Tumor Cells After Immunization in a Rat Model System
Author(s) -
Bernard Bonnotte,
Nicolas Larmonier,
Nathalie Favre,
Annie Fromentin,
Monique Moutet,
Monique Martin,
Sandeep Gurbuxani,
Éric Solary,
Bruno Chauffert,
François Martin
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.167.9.5077
Subject(s) - cytotoxic t cell , immune system , in vitro , biology , macrophage , effector , cancer research , cd8 , immunology , infiltration (hvac) , immunization , pathology , medicine , physics , thermodynamics , biochemistry
Immunization can prevent tumor growth, but the effector cells directly responsible for tumor cell killing in immunized hosts remain undetermined. The present study compares tumor grafts that progress in naive syngeneic rats with the same grafts that completely regress in hosts preimmunized with an immunogenic cell variant. The progressive tumors contain only a few macrophages that remain at the periphery of the tumor without direct contact with the cancer cells. These macrophages do not kill tumor cells in vitro. In contrast, tumors grafted in immunized hosts and examined at the beginning of tumor regression show a dramatic infiltration with mature macrophages, many of them in direct contact with the cancer cells. These macrophages are strongly cytotoxic for the tumor cells in vitro. In contrast to macrophages, tumor-associated lymphocytes are not directly cytotoxic to the tumor cells, even when obtained from tumor-immune rats. However, CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells prepared from the regressing tumors induce tumoricidal activity in splenic macrophages from normal or tumor-bearing rats and in macrophages that infiltrate progressive tumors. These results strongly suggest that the main tumoricidal effector cells in preimmunized rats are macrophages that have been activated by adjacent tumor-immune lymphocytes.
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