Publication | Closed Access
The inhibition of neoplastic cell proliferation with human natural tumor necrosis factor.
33
Citations
27
References
1987
Year
ImmunologyPathologyCell DeathCell CycleImmunotherapyCancer BiologyTumor BiologyInflammationCancer Cell BiologyHuman Natural InterferonRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchTumor GrowthNeoplastic Cell ProliferationMalignant DiseaseTumor MicroenvironmentTumor SuppressorMedicineCancer Growth
Purified human natural tumor necrosis factor (n-TNF) was prepared by stimulating human leukemic B cell line (BALL-1) with Sendai virus. The colony formations of all of 18 human cancer-derived abnormal cell lines were suppressed by 10(1)-10(6) U/ml of n-TNF, while n-TNF was nontoxic to all human normal fibroblast cells. This in vitro inhibition of cell growth was reversible. In breast adenocarcinoma MCF7 cells treated with n-TNF a specific decrease of DNA synthesis was observed, and DNA histograms showed a block at G1 in the cell cycle. In vivo studies revealed that n-TNF suppressed the tumor growth of murine Meth A sarcoma, human renal adenocarcinoma (ACHN), malignant melanoma (SK-MEL-28) and glioblastoma (U-373 MG). Isobologram analysis showed that n-TNF synergistically inhibited cell growth in combination with human natural interferon (IFN)-a. In vivo synergism of n-TNF and IFN-a was also found in the U-373 MG tumor model implanted into nude mice.
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