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Comparative Study
. 1984 Dec;44(12 Pt 1):5661-5.

Relative contribution of antiproliferative and host immunity-associated activity of mouse interferon in murine tumor therapy

  • PMID: 6498826
Comparative Study

Relative contribution of antiproliferative and host immunity-associated activity of mouse interferon in murine tumor therapy

T Kataoka et al. Cancer Res. 1984 Dec.

Abstract

Administration of mouse interferon (IFN; 0.5 to 1 X 10(7) reference units/mg protein) inhibited the growth of Meth A and Meth 1 fibrosarcomas, but to a lesser extent, if at all, the growth of Colon 26 adenocarcinoma in BALB/c mice. The in vitro IFN sensitivity of these three tumors was not consistent with the in vivo therapeutic response in mice bearing these tumors under the present experimental conditions; Colon 26, the most sensitive of the three tumors in the in vitro antiproliferation test, did not respond or responded most poorly to IFN therapy; furthermore, Meth A and Meth 1 tumors responded similarly well to IFN therapy, although there was about a 100-fold difference in their in vitro IFN sensitivity. These results as well as the kinetic analysis of IFN concentrations of the serum of Meth A- or Colon 26-bearing mice did not indicate that the antiproliferative activity of IFN was solely responsible for its in vivo therapeutic effect. In contrast, abrogation of T-cell immunity by alpha mouse thymocyte globulin completely nullified the IFN-dependent therapeutic effect in Meth A-bearing mice. Furthermore, the IFN-dependent therapeutic response in Meth A tumors was much weaker in T-cell-defective BALB/c (nu/nu) mice than that in immunologically competent BALB/c (+/+) mice and was marginal, if present at all, confirming that T-cell immunity was involved in the IFN-dependent therapeutic effect and suggesting that the antiproliferative activity of IFN may only be responsible to a small extent for the therapeutic effect.

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