PMID: 8602462Mar 1, 1996Paper

Cancer prevention by adoptive transfer of antigen 60-activated immunocompetent cells

Scandinavian Journal of Immunology
H Maes, C Cocito

Abstract

The authors have already shown that A60, the thermostable macromolecular antigen complex of Mycobacterium bovis BCG, induced resistance to tumour challenge in several murine systems. In the present work, the authors provided evidence that activated macrophages played a major role, and cytolytic T lymphocytes a minor one, in both in vivo and in vitro A60-promoted cancer cell cytolysis. To identify the types of immunocompetent cells involved in this protective effect, macrophages and T lymphocytes from A60-primed mice donors were adoptively transferred to irradiated recipients prior to EMT 6 tumour challenge. In some groups, A60-primed donors were survivors of previous tumour challenges. Transfer of T lymphocytes from the spleen or lymph-nodes of A60-immunized mice induced 80-90% protection against tumour challenge. Conversely, transferred macrophages, although cytolytically active, did not induce resistance to tumour implantation. Furthermore, adoptive transfer with T lymphocytes from A60-immunized and EMT 6 challenge-surviving donors induced 100% protection. It is concluded that stimulation of T lymphocytes by A60 is the key step which leads to activation of the immunocompetent cells involved in tumour rejection.

Citations

Aug 25, 1999·Medical Hypotheses·H H MaesR F Maes
Mar 21, 1998·European Journal of Clinical Investigation·C Cocito, H Maes

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