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C5a-Mediated Leukotriene B4-Amplified Neutrophil Chemotaxis Is Essential in Tumor Immunotherapy Facilitated by Anti-Tumor Monoclonal Antibody and β-Glucan
Author(s) -
Daniel J. Allendorf,
Jun Yan,
Gordon D. Ross,
Richard Hansen,
Jarosław Baran,
Krishnaprasad Subbarao,
Li Wang,
Bodduluri Haribabu
Publication year - 2005
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.174.11.7050
Subject(s) - priming (agriculture) , leukotriene b4 , antibody opsonization , integrin alpha m , immunology , cd18 , granulocyte , macrophage 1 antigen , in vivo , biology , monoclonal antibody , chemotaxis , immunotherapy , leukotriene , cancer research , opsonin , immune system , receptor , antibody , inflammation , biochemistry , botany , germination , microbiology and biotechnology , asthma
Intravenous and orally administered beta-glucans promote tumor regression and survival by priming granulocyte and macrophage C receptor 3 (CR3, iC3bR and CD11b/CD18) to trigger the cytotoxicity of tumor cells opsonized with iC3b via anti-tumor Abs. Despite evidence for priming of macrophage CR3 by oral beta-glucan in vivo, the current study in C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice showed that granulocytes were the essential killer cells in mAb- and oral beta-glucan-mediated tumor regression, because responses were absent in granulocyte-depleted mice. Among granulocytes, neutrophils were the major effector cells, because tumor regression did not occur when C5a-dependent chemotaxis was blocked with a C5aR antagonist, whereas tumor regression was normal in C3aR(-/-) mice. Neutrophil recruitment by C5a in vivo required amplification via leukotriene B(4), because both C5a-mediated leukocyte recruitment into the peritoneal cavity and tumor regression were suppressed in leukotriene B(4)R-deficient (BLT-1(-/-)) mice.

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