Europe PMC

This website requires cookies, and the limited processing of your personal data in order to function. By using the site you are agreeing to this as outlined in our privacy notice and cookie policy.

Abstract 


Inoculated immunogenic cancer cells after initial growth are potentially rejected by specific host immunity; however, the outcome of the interaction between host and inoculated cancer cells is a function of multiple factors including the route of inoculation, the number of cells, the density of antigens on the injected cancer cells, and the state of the immune system of the host. In the present study, we have examined a different kind of variable: the stroma that inoculated tumor cells initially reside in. The impetus to examine this factor arises from observations that cancer cells from several lines inoculated as fragments of solid tumors often grow progressively, whereas the same number or more than 10-fold larger numbers of identical type cells injected as a suspension are rejected, even though fragments or suspended cells are both tumorigenic at the same doses in nude mice. In the present studies, we found that: (a) indeed, cancer cells inoculated as fragments were more tumorigenic than cancer cells in suspension; (b) the tumorigenicity of suspended cancer cells was increased by injection of the cells into polyurethane sponge implants; (c) cancer cells were more tumorigenic embedded in syngeneic stroma than in transgenic antigenic stroma expressing the K216 major histocompatibility complex class I antigen; and (d) antigenic, bone marrow-derived, stromal components (presumably passenger leukocytes) were sufficient to cause rejection of immunogenic but antigenically unrelated cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Free full text 


Logo of jexpmedLink to Publisher's site
J Exp Med. 1992 Jan 1; 175(1): 139–146.
PMCID: PMC2119086
PMID: 1309851

Stroma is critical for preventing or permitting immunological destruction of antigenic cancer cells

Abstract

Inoculated immunogenic cancer cells after initial growth are potentially rejected by specific host immunity; however, the outcome of the interaction between host and inoculated cancer cells is a function of multiple factors including the route of inoculation, the number of cells, the density of antigens on the injected cancer cells, and the state of the immune system of the host. In the present study, we have examined a different kind of variable: the stroma that inoculated tumor cells initially reside in. The impetus to examine this factor arises from observations that cancer cells from several lines inoculated as fragments of solid tumors often grow progressively, whereas the same number or more than 10-fold larger numbers of identical type cells injected as a suspension are rejected, even though fragments or suspended cells are both tumorigenic at the same doses in nude mice. In the present studies, we found that: (a) indeed, cancer cells inoculated as fragments were more tumorigenic than cancer cells in suspension; (b) the tumorigenicity of suspended cancer cells was increased by injection of the cells into polyurethane sponge implants; (c) cancer cells were more tumorigenic embedded in syngeneic stroma than in transgenic antigenic stroma expressing the K216 major histocompatibility complex class I antigen; and (d) antigenic, bone marrow-derived, stromal components (presumably passenger leukocytes) were sufficient to cause rejection of immunogenic but antigenically unrelated cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (799K).

Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.
  • Garin-Chesa P, Old LJ, Rettig WJ. Cell surface glycoprotein of reactive stromal fibroblasts as a potential antibody target in human epithelial cancers. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1990 Sep;87(18):7235–7239. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Dvorak HF. Tumors: wounds that do not heal. Similarities between tumor stroma generation and wound healing. N Engl J Med. 1986 Dec 25;315(26):1650–1659. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • van den Hooff A. Stromal involvement in malignant growth. Adv Cancer Res. 1988;50:159–196. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Perdrizet GA, Ross SR, Stauss HJ, Singh S, Koeppen H, Schreiber H. Animals bearing malignant grafts reject normal grafts that express through gene transfer the same antigen. J Exp Med. 1990 Apr 1;171(4):1205–1220. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Stauss HJ, Linsk R, Fischer A, Watts S, Banasiak D, Haberman A, Clark I, Forman J, McMillan M, Schreiber H, et al. Isolation of the MHC genes encoding the tumour-specific class I antigens expressed on a murine fibrosarcoma. J Immunogenet. 1986 Apr-Jun;13(2-3):101–111. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Stauss HJ, Van Waes C, Fink MA, Starr B, Schreiber H. Identification of a unique tumor antigen as rejection antigen by molecular cloning and gene transfer. J Exp Med. 1986 Nov 1;164(5):1516–1530. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Urban JL, Burton RC, Holland JM, Kripke ML, Schreiber H. Mechanisms of syngeneic tumor rejection. Susceptibility of host-selected progressor variants to various immunological effector cells. J Exp Med. 1982 Feb 1;155(2):557–573. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Fisher MS, Kripke ML. Systemic alteration induced in mice by ultraviolet light irradiation and its relationship to ultraviolet carcinogenesis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1977 Apr;74(4):1688–1692. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Lee DR, Rubocki RJ, Lie WR, Hansen TH. The murine MHC class I genes, H-2Dq and H-2Lq, are strikingly homologous to each other, H-2Ld, and two genes reported to encode tumor-specific antigens. J Exp Med. 1988 Nov 1;168(5):1719–1739. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Van Waes C, Urban JL, Rothstein JL, Ward PL, Schreiber H. Highly malignant tumor variants retain tumor-specific antigens recognized by T helper cells. J Exp Med. 1986 Nov 1;164(5):1547–1565. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Ward PL, Koeppen HK, Hurteau T, Rowley DA, Schreiber H. Major histocompatibility complex class I and unique antigen expression by murine tumors that escaped from CD8+ T-cell-dependent surveillance. Cancer Res. 1990 Jul 1;50(13):3851–3858. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Ward PL, Koeppen H, Hurteau T, Schreiber H. Tumor antigens defined by cloned immunological probes are highly polymorphic and are not detected on autologous normal cells. J Exp Med. 1989 Jul 1;170(1):217–232. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Morison WL, Jerdan MS, Hoover TL, Farmer ER. UV radiation-induced tumors in haired mice: identification as squamous cell carcinomas. J Natl Cancer Inst. 1986 Nov;77(5):1155–1162. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Kripke ML, Thorn RM, Lill PH, Civin CI, Pazmiño NH, Fisher MS. Further characterization of immunological unresponsiveness induced in mice by ultraviolet radiation. Growth and induction of nonultraviolet-induced tumors in ultraviolet-irradiated mice. Transplantation. 1979 Sep;28(3):212–217. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Philipps C, McMillan M, Flood PM, Murphy DB, Forman J, Lancki D, Womack JE, Goodenow RS, Schreiber H. Identification of a unique tumor-specific antigen as a novel class I major histocompatibility molecule. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1985 Aug;82(15):5140–5144. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Evans GA, Margulies DH, Shykind B, Seidman JG, Ozato K. Exon shuffling: mapping polymorphic determinants on hybrid mouse transplantation antigens. Nature. 1982 Dec 23;300(5894):755–757. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Mullen CA, Urban JL, Van Waes C, Rowley DA, Schreiber H. Multiple cancers. Tumor burden permits the outgrowth of other cancers. J Exp Med. 1985 Nov 1;162(5):1665–1682. [Europe PMC free article] [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Applegate KG, Balch CM, Pellis NR. In vitro migration of lymphocytes through collagen matrix: arrested locomotion in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. Cancer Res. 1990 Nov 15;50(22):7153–7158. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Ramrakha PS, Sharp RJ, Yeoman H, Stanley MA. The influence of MHC-compatible and MHC-incompatible antigen-presenting cells on the survival of MHC-compatible cultured murine keratinocyte allografts. Transplantation. 1989 Oct;48(4):676–680. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]
  • Champlin R, Gale RP. Acute myelogenous leukemia: recent advances in therapy. Blood. 1987 Jun;69(6):1551–1562. [Abstract] [Google Scholar]

Articles from The Journal of Experimental Medicine are provided here courtesy of The Rockefeller University Press

Citations & impact 


Impact metrics

Jump to Citations

Citations of article over time

Alternative metrics

Altmetric item for https://www.altmetric.com/details/42573582
Altmetric
Discover the attention surrounding your research
https://www.altmetric.com/details/42573582

Smart citations by scite.ai
Smart citations by scite.ai include citation statements extracted from the full text of the citing article. The number of the statements may be higher than the number of citations provided by EuropePMC if one paper cites another multiple times or lower if scite has not yet processed some of the citing articles.
Explore citation contexts and check if this article has been supported or disputed.
https://scite.ai/reports/10.1084/jem.175.1.139

Supporting
Mentioning
Contrasting
3
90
0

Article citations


Go to all (111) article citations

Funding 


Funders who supported this work.

NCI NIH HHS (3)