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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have previously shown that an intact immune system was essential to the increase in survival time of IFN-alpha/beta-treated mice injected i.v. with an IFN-alpha/beta-resistant line of Friend erythroleukemia cells (FLC) highly metastatic to the liver and spleen. Here, we have investigated the early interactions of IFN alpha/beta with host cells prior to the development of the immune response. IFN alpha/beta treatment resulted in 50- to 100-fold inhibition of FLC multiplication in the liver and spleen of normal
DBA
/2 mice shortly after tumor inoculation, as evaluated by colony formation in agarose. IFN treatment was far less effective in inhibiting the multiplication of FLC in the livers of NK-cell-deficient
DBA
/2 beige mice, or in immunocompetent
DBA
/2 mice treated with antibody to asialo GMI, or silica, or in mice subjected to sub-lethal irradiation. Injection of antibody to CD4 or CD8 did not affect the early inhibitory action of IFN alpha/beta on FLC multiplication but did decrease survival time. Light- and electron-microscope examination of the livers of IFN-treated, FLC-injected mice confirmed the early inhibition of FLC multiplication in the liver and spleen. Our results indicate that IFN alpha/beta inhibits the development of FLC visceral
metastases
by acting first on host cells, such as NK cells and macrophages, and then continues to act in consort with the developing immune response.
...
PMID:Interaction of IFN alpha/beta with host cells essential to the early inhibition of Friend erythroleukemia visceral metastases in mice. 818 64
The cell adhesion molecule (CAM) L1 is involved in homotypic and heterotypic adhesion between neural cells. It has recently also been identified on leucocytes. We have investigated the expression of L1 on hematopoietic tumor cell lines and found that several tumors including the ESb-MP lymphoma are positive for L1. A potential role for L1 in spontaneous metastasis formation was examined using these cells. From wild-type (wt) L1high lymphoma cells we selected by a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) stable L1low expression variants. Syngeneic
DBA
/2 mice injected subcutaneously with L1low clones showed faster primary tumor growth, developed visceral
metastases
significantly faster and died earlier than animals carrying L1high wt cells. L1 high revertants from the L1low variants showed again a reduced metastatic capacity and a malignancy similar to the wt cells. Expression of L1 on the tumor variants and revertants correlated directly with their homotypic aggregation behaviour in vitro. L1 expression correlated negatively with metastatic capacity. These results suggest that L1 molecules may contribute to the overall malignant potential of the lymphoma cells, presumably by interfering with cell-cell interactions critical for tumor growth and dissemination.
Clin Exp
Metastasis
1993 Sep
PMID:Expression of L1 cell adhesion molecule is associated with lymphoma growth and metastasis. 837 17
Murine L5178Y-ML cells, when transplanted subcutaneously into the flank of (BALB/c x
DBA
/2)F1 mice, grew locally and always formed spontaneous
metastases
in the liver. Even after surgical removal of the primary tumour mass 5 or 7 days after tumour cell inoculation, all mice died due to liver metastases within 18 days. Using this model of tumour metastasis, we examined whether serine protease or deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) would affect metastasis. Spontaneous liver metastasis of L5178Y-ML cells was enhanced by systemic administration of alpha-chymotrypsin at 3, 4 and 5 days or at 5, 6 and 7 days after tumour cell inoculation. This result was consistent with a previous report on blood-borne lung metastasis. In contrast, systemic administration of DNase I at 3, 4 and 5 days or at 5, 6 and 7 days after tumour cell inoculation inhibited liver metastasis. Neither treatment affected primary tumour growth. An influence of DNase I on tumour cell arrest in the microvasculature of the liver was suggested by scanning electron microscopy. DNase I treatment resulted in a statistically significant prolongation of the survival period, however, the effect was not satisfactory. A more striking anti-metastatic treatment resulting in a greater prolongation of the survival period was achieved by combining surgical removal of the primary tumour mass with DNase I treatment. These results suggest that DNase I could be a potential therapeutic agent used in conjunction with surgery to prevent clinical blood-borne metastasis.
...
PMID:Deoxyribonuclease treatment prevents blood-borne liver metastasis of cutaneously transplanted tumour cells in mice. 842 81
Interferon alpha/beta (IFN alpha/beta) is highly effective in inhibiting the development of Friend erythroleukemia cell (FLC) visceral
metastases
in
DBA
/2 mice injected intravenously (i.v.) with FLC, but does not protect FLC-injected
DBA
/2 beige (bg/bg) mice. Use of IFN alpha/beta-resistance FLC indicated that IFN was acting through host mechanisms in
DBA
/2 mice and thus pointed to a defect in some host mechanism in bg/bg mice essential for IFN's anti-metastatic action. We undertook experiments to restore in bg/bg mice the marked anti-FLC metastatic effect of IFN alpha/beta observed in
DBA
/2 and +/bg mice. Adoptive transfer of spleen cells from normal syngeneic mice to IFN-treated bg/bg mice was ineffective, but the transfer of splenic T lymphocytes from FLC-immunized
DBA
/2 or +/bg mice markedly increased the survival time of FLC-injected bg/bg mice provided that these mice were also treated with IFN alpha/beta. Neither treatment alone resulted in an increase in survival time. As few as 1 x 10(7) immune spleen cells were effective in IFN-treated FLC-injected bg/bg mice. The T-cell immune response to FLC of bg/bg mice was diminished compared with that of +/bg mice. Likewise, only combination therapy of immune spleen cells and IFN alpha/beta resulted in an increased survival time of ESb-lymphoma-injected bg/bg mice. Our results indicate the essential participation both of T-cell-mediated immune mechanisms and of IFN alpha/beta in the inhibition of FLC visceral
metastases
.
...
PMID:Sensitized T lymphocytes render DBA/2 beige mice responsive to IFN alpha/beta therapy of Friend erythroleukemia visceral metastases. 850 22
Effective adoptive immunotherapy of immunocompetent
DBA
/2 mice challenged i.v. with the highly metastatic ESb T-cell lymphoma required the combined treatment of recipient mice with tumor-sensitized spleen cells and IFN-alpha/beta. In contrast, immune spleen cells and IFN-alpha/beta treatment did not increase the survival time of ESb-injected
DBA
/2-nu/nu mice,
DBA
/2-bg/bg mice, or normal
DBA
/2 mice injected with antibody to CD4. Treatment of immunocompetent
DBA
/2 mice with antibody to asialo-GM1, silica, dichloromethylene diphosphonate-containing liposomes, or 500 rads whole-body gamma-irradiation did not diminish the antimetastatic action of ESb-immune cells and IFN-alpha/beta. These results indicate that adoptively transferred immune T lymphocytes and IFN-alpha/beta act together with host CD4+ T lymphocytes/factors to inhibit ESb visceral
metastases
. Combined treatment with ESb-immune cells together with interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), IL-2, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, or granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor did not increase the survival time of normal
DBA
/2 mice challenged with ESb cells. In contrast, IL-12, which had only a slight antimetastatic effect when administered alone, did synergize with ESb-immune spleen cells and increased the survival time of ESb-challenged mice to a similar extent as did IFN-alpha/beta and immune spleen cells. Treatment of
DBA
/2 mice with potent antibody to IFN-alpha/beta did not abrogate the capacity of IL-12 and ESb-immune spleen cells to inhibit ESb
metastases
. Unlike immunotherapy with ESb-immune cells and IFN-alpha/beta, ESb-immune cells together with IL-12 inhibited ESb
metastases
in immunodeficient
DBA
/2-bg/bg mice.
...
PMID:Host CD4+ T lymphocytes are required for the synergistic action of interferon-alpha/beta and adoptively transferred immune cells in the inhibition of visceral ESb metastases. 852 4
P815 murine mastocytoma cells were separated to plastic-adherent and -nonadherent cell populations by repetitive in vitro selections. Their abilities of experimental and spontaneous
metastases
were investigated in the syngeneic
DBA
/2 mice. While the plastic-adherent populations were found to be liver-metastatic, the plastic-nonadherent populations were liver-nonmetastatic. The inability of plastic-nonadherent P815 cells to
metastasize
to the liver did not mean that these cells were not tumorigeneic because they could
metastasize
to tissues and/or organs other than the liver. Hence it could be looked as inability for liver specific metastasis resulted from, or related to, the loss of plastic adhesiveness. By limiting dilution of plastic-adherent and -nonadherent P815 cells, two series of well comparable P815 clones were established: (1) plastic-adherent, liver-metastatic clone and (2) plastic-nonadherent, liver-nonmetastatic one. Since these two series of P815 clone are originated from a common parent line, they might be valuable in the study of the molecular mechanisms of liver specific metastasis and of the relations between liver metastasis and cell adhesiveness.
...
PMID:The relationship between adherence and liver metastatic ability in murine mastocytoma cell line. 880 58
Murine endothelial cells immortalized with the middle-size Ag of polyomavirus (PmT) cause vascular tumors in syngenic mice by recruitment of host normal endothelial cells. This pathogenic process is similar to that occurring in Kaposi's sarcoma, in which the core of the lesion is constituted by "spindle cells," which recruit normal vascular mesenchymal cells. In murine endothelial cells, PmT induces modification of the expression of genes, including that of IL-6. Since IL-6 is a pleiotrophic cytokine that also regulates endothelial cell functions related to angiogenesis, we studied the relevance of IL-6 in the tumorigenicity of PmT-endothelial cells. In vitro studies demonstrated that the spontaneous PmT-endothelial cell proliferation rate was slow during the first 6 days of culture and then increased rapidly and paralleled the IL-6 release. The addition of recombinant IL-6 during the first days of culture induced a marked proliferation in a dose-dependent manner. PmT-endothelial cells expressed on their surface a high-affinity binding site for IL-6 constituted by both IL-6Ralpha and gp130 transmembrane receptors. The growth-promoting effect of exogenous IL-6 or that released by PmT-endothelial cells was abrogated by mAbs anti-IL-6Ralpha, whereas a mAb recognizing the endothelial cell CD31 molecule was inactive. 15A7 mAb anti-murine IL-6Ralpha was also active in vivo, reducing the number of
metastases
forming after transplantation of PmT-endothelial cells in
DBA
/2 mice. 15A7 mAb also increased the survival of mice bearing vascular tumors. We conclude that IL-6 is involved in the progression of vascular tumors induced by PmT, and that the blockage of IL-6-mediated intercellular circuits could be useful in the management of human vascular tumors, including Kaposi's sarcoma.
...
PMID:IL-6 is an in vitro and in vivo autocrine growth factor for middle T antigen-transformed endothelial cells. 880 65
Graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) and Graft-versus-host (GVH) reactions were compared after systemic transfer of allogeneic antitumor immune T lymphocytes from B10.D2 (H-2d; Mls(b)) into
DBA
/2 (H-2d; Mis(a)) mice. Before immune cell transfer, recipient
DBA
/2 mice were sublethally irradiated with 5 Gy to prevent host-versus-graft reactivity. Recipients were either bearing syngeneic metastatic ESb lymphomas (GVL system) or were normal, non-tumor-bearing mice (GVH system). We previously reported that this adoptive immunotherapy protocol (ADI) had pronounced GVL activity and led to immune rejection of even advanced metastasized cancer. In this study, monoclonal antibodies were used for immunohistochemical analysis of native frozen tissue sections from either spleen or liver to distinguish donor from host cells, to differentiate between CD4 and CD8 T lymphocytes, and to stain sialoadhesin-positive macrophages at different time points after cell transfer. The kinetics of donor cell infiltration in spleen and liver differed in that the lymphoid organ was infiltrated earlier (days 1 to 5 after transfer) than the nonlymphoid organ (days 5 to 20). After reaching a peak, donor cell infiltration decreased gradually and was not detectable in the spleen after day 20 and in the liver after day 30. The organ-infiltrating donor immune cells were mostly T lymphocytes and stained positive for CD4 or CD8 T-cell markers. A remarkable GVL-associated observation was made with regard to a subset of macrophages bearing the adhesion molecule sialoadhesin (SER+ macrophages). In the livers of tumor-bearing mice, their numbers increased between days 1 and 12 after ADI by a factor greater than 30. Double-staining for donor cell marker and SER showed that the sialoadhesin-expressing macrophages were of host origin. The SER+ host macrophages from GVL livers were isolated by enzyme perfusion and rosetting 12 days after ADI, when they reached peak values of about 60 cells per liver lobule, and were tested, without further antigen addition, for their capacity to stimulate an antitumor CD8 T-cell response. The results of this immunologic analysis suggest that these cells in the liver function as scavengers of the destroyed
metastases
and as antigen-processing and -presenting cells for antitumor immune T cells.
...
PMID:Differences between graft-versus-leukemia and graft-versus-host reactivity. I. Interaction of donor immune T cells with tumor and/or host cells. 905 44
The metastatic ESb-MP murine lymphoma in
DBA
/2 mice has been used as a model for investigating
metastatic disease
and its cure by adoptive immunotherapy (ADI) as monitored by in vivo multislice spin-echo 1H NMR microimaging at 7 T. isoflurane inhalation anesthesia facilitated long measurement sessions, and respiratory gating with a fiber-optic sensor greatly reduced motional artifacts. With T2 weighting (TR = 2 s, TE = 30 ms) mean signal-to-noise ratios of 30 and 15 for kidney and liver, respectively, were achieved in 20 min (100-micron pixels, 1-mm slices, 25-mm field of view). Without the use of contrast agents,
metastases
with diameters > or = 0.3 mm in the imaged plane could be detected as hyperintense lesions in kidney (contrast ratio ca. 1.4) and liver (contrast ratio ca. 2) with a confidence level of > 98%. For the first time the complete eradication of late-stage macroscopic
metastases
by ADI could be demonstrated noninvasively by MRI.
...
PMID:In vivo 1H-NMR microimaging with respiratory triggering for monitoring adoptive immunotherapy of metastatic mouse lymphoma. 933 46
Animal experiments in BALB/c-mice and in
DBA
/2-mice confirmed that lectin blockade with D-galactose containing receptor analogues can inhibit metastatic spread into the liver. The number of liver colonies of inoculated tumor cells was significantly reduced after D-galactose treatment as compared to animals of control group. Based on experimental investigations 193 colorectal carcinoma patients (UICC stages I-III) were enrolled in a prospectively randomized clinical trial. 93 patients were treated perioperatively with D-galactose- (treatment group: 1.5 g/kg body weight and per day) or D-glucose containing electrolyte infusions (control group: n = 100). Significant side effects were not observed. There were no cases of perioperative mortality. The overall complication rate was 7.3%. Since tumor stages were unequally distributed, analysis was performed in strata. Patients were observed for a total of 6237 months. Differences in overall survival and survival free of recurrence and hepatic
metastases
were negligible for stages I and II. For stage III carcinoma patients (n = 75) analysis of survival free of hepatic
metastases
revealed a shift to delayed events (i.e. hepatic
metastases
or death) after D-galactose treatment within 24 months following surgery. In patients with stage III carcinoma there was an indication for an overall benefit in survival after D-galactose treatment (p = 0.102).
...
PMID:Liver lectin blocking with D-galactose to prevent hepatic metastases in colorectal carcinoma patients. 942 77
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