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Role of NK cells in the control of metastatic spread and growth of tumor cells in mice

✍ Scribed by E. Gorelik; R. H. Wiltrout; K. Okumura; S. Habu; R. B. Herberman


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1982
Tongue
French
Weight
665 KB
Volume
30
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The ability of BALB/c nude and C57BL/6 mice to eliminate tumor cells from the blood stream was severely impaired after a single inoculation of 0.2 ml of anti‐asialo BMI (asGMI) serum, diluted 1:40 to 1:320. The number of i.v.‐inoculated YAC‐I cells surviving in the lungs of BALB/c nude mice pretreated with anti‐asGMI serum was 28 times higher than in the control nude mice. In this respect, nude mice treated with anti‐asGMI behaved similarly to beige mice. The increase in the initial survival of tumor cells in the mice that was induced by pre‐treatment with anti‐asGMI resulted in a substantial increase in the number of artificial lung metastases that developed. In C57BL/6 +/+ mice treated with anti‐asGMI and in C57BL/6 beige mice, i.v. inoculation of B16 melanoma cells induced 10 times more metastatic foci in the lungs than in the control C57BL/6 +/+ mice. In contrast, in nude mice which possess higher levels of NK reactivity, metastatic growth was suppressed 7‐fold in comparison with intact C57BL/6 +/+ mice. In beige mice and in C57BL/6 +/+ mice treated with anti‐asGMI, multiple metastatic foci developed in the liver, whereas in control C57BL/6 +/+ and nude mice, no extrapulmonary metastases were found. These data indicate that B16 melanoma cells are able to grow in the liver, but their growth is ordinarily prevented by NK cells. The antimetastatic defense of C57BL/6 mice treated by anti‐asGMI could be restored by transplantation of 40 × 10^6^ normal spleen cells. This antimetastatic effect of transplanted spleen cells was mediated by asGMI‐bearing cells, since after in vitro pre‐treatment of normal spleen cells with anti‐asGMI and complement, they lost their ability to inhibit the development of artifical metastases in the lungs of C57BL/6 mice. Suppression of NK reactivity by multiple injections of anti‐asGMI (every 4 to 5 days), in C57BL/6 mice inoculated intrafootpad (i.f.p.) with B16 melanoma or 3LL tumor cells, did not influence the growth of local tumors, but dramatically accelerated the development of spontaneous pulmonary metastases. These data demonstrate that NK cells may play an important role in resistance to the dissemination of tumor cells, and therefore contribute to the control of metastasis formation in mice.


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