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Title: In vivo antitumor effects of murine interferon-gamma-inducing factor/interleukin-18 in mice bearing syngeneic Meth A sarcoma malignant ascites. Author: Micallef MJ, Yoshida K, Kawai S, Hanaya T, Kohno K, Arai S, Tanimoto T, Torigoe K, Fujii M, Ikeda M, Kurimoto M. Journal: Cancer Immunol Immunother; 1997 Jan; 43(6):361-7. PubMed ID: 9067408. Abstract: Interferon-gamma-inducing factor/interleukin-18 is a novel cytokine that reportedly augments natural killer (NK) activity in human and mouse peripheral blood mononuclear cell cultures in vitro and has recently been designated IL-18. In this study, IL-18 exhibited significant antitumor effects in BALB/c mice challenged intraperitoneally (i.p.) with syngeneic Meth A sarcoma when administered i.p. on days 1, 2 and 3 after challenge. Intravenous (i.v.) administration also induced antitumor effects in the tumor-bearing mice; however, subcutaneous (s.c.) administration did not. When mice were twice pretreated with 1 microg IL-18 3 days and 6 h before tumor challenge, all mice survived whereas control mice died within 3 weeks of challenge. Inhibitory effects on Meth A cell growth in vitro were not observed with either IL-18 or interferon gamma. The effects of IL-18 pretreatment were abrogated by abolition of NK activity after mice had been injected with anti-asialo GM1 antibody 48 h before and, 24 h and 72 h after tumor challenge. Mice pretreated with IL-18 and surviving tumor challenge resisted rechallenge with Meth A cells but could not reject Ehrlich ascites carcinoma, and spleen cells from the resistant mice, but not control mice, exhibited cytotoxic activity against Meth A cells in vitro after restimulation with mitomycin C-treated Meth A cells for 5 days. The effector cells in the spleen cell preparations from resistant mice appear to be CD4+ cells because cytolytic activity was significantly inhibited after depletion of this subset by monoclonal antibodies and complement. In conclusion, IL-18 exhibits in vivo immunologically (primarily NK) mediated antitumor effects in mice challenged with syngeneic Meth A sarcoma and induces immunological memory and the generation of cytotoxic CD4+ cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]