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Query: UMLS:C1261473 (
sarcoma
)
25,952
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tumors were eradicated following adoptive immunotherapy of (C57BL/6J X DBA/2J) F1 (B6D2F1) hybrid mice bearing the C57B1/6J (B6)
sarcoma
, MCA/76-9, by treatment with cyclophosphamide (CY) and adoptively transferred tumor-sensitized B6D2F1 T cells. Identical treatment of B6----B6D2F1 or DBA----B6D2F1 chimeric tumor-bearing mice resulted in temporary tumor regression only. Immunotherapy in both systems resulted in the appearance at the tumor site of large numbers of T lymphocytes and macrophages, which were shown to be derived from the adoptively transferred donor immune B6D2F1 cells or from the original reconstituting bone marrow respectively. The
TAC
and TAL isolated from either B6D2F1 or chimeric mice expressed potent toxicity in vitro towards tumor target cells. In addition,
TAC
from both systems inhibited tumor growth in a Winn assay in an immunologically specific manner. Suppressor cells detected in spleens 8 days after CY injection of normal B6, DBA, B6D2F1 hybrid and chimeric mice and also after adoptive immunotherapy of tumor-bearing B6, B6D2F1 and chimeric mice and were shown to persist in the spleens of chimeric mice for at least 31 days after adoptive immunotherapy. In contrast, spleen cells taken 31 days after therapy of B6D2F1 mice did not contain detectable suppressor cells and were able to induce tumor eradication when adoptively transferred to CY-treated tumor-bearing B6D2F1 mice. The possibility is discussed that two forms of suppressor mechanisms are induced after adoptive immunotherapy of chimeric mice and that they may down-regulate donor T cell responses at the tumor site.
...
PMID:The inability of adoptive immunotherapy to eradicate tumor cells in radiation-induced chimeric mice: the possible down-regulation of intratumor immune amplification. 294 23
Human T cell clones cytotoxic for autologous
sarcoma
cell lines have been developed from patient JM with an osteogenic sarcoma, and from patients EG and RM with malignant fibrohistiocytoma. These clones were derived from the cocultivation of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) with the respective patient's autologous irradiated established tumor cell lines (AIT). After two cycles of stimulation for 5 days in bulk culture, these "educated" lymphocytes were seeded at a density of 1 X 10(6) cells/well in 24-well plates and were cultured in the presence of highly purified natural IL 2 and AIT, the latter serving as a feeder layer. Cell numbers were reduced from the initial seeding density by one log each week until reaching a density of 10(2) cells. These cells were found to be stable in viability and cytotoxic activity, after which limiting dilution was then performed. Within 4 to 6 wk, clones were isolated with unique specificities. These clones were capable of proliferating to a total density of 10(9) cells/ml and maintained their specific cytotoxicity for more than 6 mo. Testing with a panel of target cells of various histotypes, cold-target inhibition assays, and blocking of cytotoxicity with anti-HLA monoclonal antibodies showed that the T cell clones recognize a common
sarcoma
-associated antigen and that the lysis is HLA restricted. Phenotypically, cytotoxic clones derived from JM were Leu-1+, Leu-2+, and Leu-3-, whereas those derived from EG exhibited either Leu-24 or Leu-3+ markers, the latter phenotype lacking cytotoxicity. RM exhibited mainly Leu-3+ clones with strong cytotoxicity. All were HNK-1- and HLA class II+, with less than 1% of cells of each clone stained by anti-
TAC
monoclonal antibody. The clones from each patient did not lyse autologous or allogeneic PBL, mitogen-induced T lymphoblasts, normal fibroblasts, cells isolated from benign neoplasms, carcinoma cells, Daudi B lymphoid cells, or K562 cells. With the exception of EG, all clones produced immune interferon in a range from 12 to 50 U/ml. The generation of long-term specific T cell clones can be used to further dissect the cellular immune response to sarcomas. Cytotoxic T cell clones have potential application for tumor immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Cellular immune response to human sarcomas: cytotoxic T cell clones reactive with autologous sarcomas. I. Development, phenotype, and specificity. 309 88
Natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity against YAC-I targets was measured in splenocytes from leukemia-prone wild mice trapped near Lake Casitas (LC) in southern California. Cytotoxicity was mediated by cells that were non-adherent to nylon wool, non-phagocytic and resistant to thy-1.2 antiserum plus complement. Natural MuLV viremia in LC mice did not impair splenic cytotoxicity against
TAC
-I target cells, Cells infected with amphotropic and ecotropic MuLV of wild mouse origin were not appreciably lysed by LC splenic effectors. Although variable levels of cytotoxicity were detected against
TAC
-1 by normal spleen cells, consistently low levels of cytotoxicity against allogenic LC lymphoma,
sarcoma
and carcinoma targets were found using the same splenocytes. These results indicate that LC mice possess splenocytes with the characteristics of natural killer (NK) cells as defined in inbred mice. The resistance of LC-derived targets to lysis by LC NK cells suggests that NK cells may not be involved in natural tumor immunosurveillance or that the development of spontaneous tumors may involve escape from NK-mediated effector mechanisms.
...
PMID:Natural killer cell activity in a population of leukemia-prone wild mice (Mus musculus). 627 13
It has previously been demonstrated that accumulated beta-catenin serves as an oncoprotein in synovial sarcoma and results in a poor overall survival rate, but the frequency of beta-catenin mutation was quite low (8.2%). The present study, using essentially the same study group of cases, screened for genetic alterations in the mutation cluster region (MCR) of the APC gene in 49 cases of synovial sarcoma. SSCP analysis followed by DNA direct sequencing revealed five missense APC mutations in four cases of synovial sarcoma (8.2%). The mutational sites comprised one case each at codons 1299 (GCT to ACT, Ala to Thr), 1412 (GGA to AGA, Gly to Arg), and 1414 (GTA to ATA, Val to Ile), in addition to one case with double point mutations at codon 1398 (AGT to AAT, Ser to Asn) and at codon 1413 (ATG to ATA, Met to Ile), together with beta-catenin mutation at codon 32 (GAC to
TAC
, Asp to Tyr). All four cases with APC mutations were histologically of the monophasic fibrous type and showed beta-catenin accumulation. All three cases with APC mutations available for follow-up data were long survivors. This study provides the first evidence that APC mutations also occur in the field of
sarcoma
, especially in synovial sarcoma.
...
PMID:APC mutations in synovial sarcoma. 1192 Jul 41
Sarcomas
constitute 5% of all of head and neck neoplasms. Angiosarcomas comprise 2% of all soft tissue tumors, 60% appear in skin and soft tissue, 50% in the head and neck and only 4% are present in the upper aerodigestive tract. We report a case of a 52 year old healthy woman with headache, weeping, foreign body sensation in the left nostril and epixtasis. The
TAC
identified a tumor in the left nostril that invaded the osseous lamina of the skull. The histopathologic diagnosis was angiosarcoma. We carried out a literature review and analysis from 1976 to 2004. Agiosarcomas of the upper aerodigestive tract have a better prognosis and long term survival free of disease than their soft tissue and skin counterparts. Recurrence is strongly correlated with positive resection margins. Complete surgery and radiotherapy are considered the optimal treatment schemes.
...
PMID:[Nasal cavity angiosarcoma: a case report and literature review]. 1671 50