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. 1984 Dec;133(6):3401-7.

Treatment of disseminated leukemia with cyclophosphamide and immune cells: tumor immunity reflects long-term persistence of tumor-specific donor T cells

  • PMID: 6149246

Treatment of disseminated leukemia with cyclophosphamide and immune cells: tumor immunity reflects long-term persistence of tumor-specific donor T cells

P D Greenberg et al. J Immunol. 1984 Dec.

Abstract

B6 mice bearing disseminated syngeneic FBL leukemia can be cured by treatment on day 5 with 180 mg/kg cyclophosphamide and 2 x 10(7) adoptively transferred syngeneic immune spleen cells. Complete tumor eradication in this model requires more than 30 days and is dependent upon the transfer of specifically immune T cells. To evaluate the relative contributions of host and donor T cells to tumor elimination and the maintenance of tumor immunity, donor cells obtained from Thy congenic mice were used for adoptive transfer. Thus, host and donor T cells could be readily distinguished by the expression of either Thy-1.2 or Thy-1.1 antigen. The results demonstrated that the majority of immunologically competent T cells present in hosts cured by adoptive therapy were of host origin. A small population of donor T cells, however, persisted long after transfer. At day 60, a time point shortly after tumor eradication had been completed, 5% of splenic T cells were of donor origin, and by day 120 this percentage had decreased to less than 2%. Functional studies performed at both time points revealed that this small number of residual donor T cells contained the subpopulation of tumor-reactive T cells present in the host. Thus, host T cells did not make a substantial contribution to the expression of the anti-tumor response and presumably have little role in either tumor eradication or the long-term maintenance of tumor immunity.

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