Publication | Open Access
Antibody to mouse interferon alpha/beta abrogates resistance to the multiplication of Friend erythroleukemia cells in the livers of allogeneic mice.
34
Citations
32
References
1988
Year
Intravenous Inoculation FlcImmunologyAllogeneic MiceImmunologic MechanismImmunotherapyImmune SystemTumor BiologyHematological MalignancyHematologyImmunopathologyCell TransplantationHealth SciencesMx ProteinFriend Erythroleukemia CellsOncogenic AgentLiver PhysiologyTumor GrowthHumoral ImmunityInterferon Alpha/betaPharmacologyCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentMalignant Blood DisorderTherapeutic EfficacyMedicineViral Immunity
Friend erythroleukemia cells (FLC) (H-2d) injected intravenously into adult syngeneic DBA/2 or allogeneic C57B1/6 (H-2b) or C3H (H-2k) mice lodge in the liver but only multiply in the liver of syngeneic mice. Our results indicated that endogenous IFN-alpha/beta was a crucial factor in preventing the multiplication of FLC in the liver of adult allogeneic mice. (a) Treatment of allogeneic adult C57B1/6 or C3H mice with polyclonal antibody to mouse IFN-alpha/beta (but not antibody to IFN-gamma) completely abrogated the resistance to the multiplication of FLC in the liver and 87% of tumor-injected, antibody-treated C57B1/6 mice died with extensive tumor involvement of the liver. In contrast, after intravenous inoculation FLC do not multiply at all (or very rarely) in the liver of adult C57B1/6 mice left untreated or treated with a variety of control globulins, and no deaths occurred. (b) 8 h after intravenous inoculation of FLC, poly(A)+ RNA hybridizable with specific DNA probes for mouse IFN-alpha or -beta (but not -gamma) was present in the liver of injected C57B1/6 mice. Using the expression of the Mx protein as an indicator of the presence of IFN-alpha/beta, we showed that Mx+ congenic C57B1/6 mice injected with FLC exhibited a marked increase in the expression of the Mx protein in the liver, spleen, kidney and lung, and this increase was blocked by treatment of mice with antibody to IFN-alpha/beta. The possibility that different host mechanisms are elicited depending on the site of tumor growth in allogeneic mice is discussed. IFN-alpha/beta appears to be of particular importance in determining the resistance of the liver to FLC in allogeneic mice.
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