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Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII logoLink to Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII
. 1996 May;42(3):193–199. doi: 10.1007/s002620050270

Cellular immune responses to autologous chronic myelogenous leukaemia cells in vitro

Graham Pawelec 1, Arnika Rehbein 1, Elke Schlotz 1, Paul da Silva 1
PMCID: PMC11037840  PMID: 8640848

Abstract

 Using a modification of the autologous mixed lymphocyte/tumour cell culture (MLTC), it is demonstrated here that lymphocytes from chronic-phase myelogenous leukaemia (CML) patients (n = 58), but not from their HLA-identical siblings, proliferated upon coculture with autologous tumour cells. However, in most cases, the level of proliferation measured was low (stimulation index <3, n = 37). This was most likely related to the amount of interleukin-10 (IL-10) released into the culture medium by the CML cells, because addition of neutralizing anti-IL-10 serum to MLTC markedly enhanced proliferative responses. In addition, supplementation of media with IL-1α further enhanced proliferative responses and a combination of anti-IL-10 serum and IL-1α was more effective than either agent alone. Only HLA-DR-matched CML cells, but not HLA-DR-mismatched CML cells or matched or mismatched PBMC restimulated proliferation of IL-2-dependent T cell lines derived from MLTC supplemented with IL-1α and anti-IL-10 serum. The responding cells under these conditions were predominantly CD4+ and secreted IL-2, and interferon γ; some secreted IL-4, but none secreted IL-10. These data therefore suggest the existence of an HLA-DR-restricted DTH/Th1-type of tumour-specific immunity in CML patients, which may be down-regulated in vitro by excessive secretion of IL-10 together with depressed secretion of IL-1.

Keywords: Key words Cellular immune response, Myelogenous leukemia

Footnotes

Received: 9 November 1995 / Accepted: 8 February 1996


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