Alterations in Signal Transduction Molecules in T Lymphocytes from Tumor-Bearing Mice

Hiromoto Mizoguchi(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), John J. O’Shea(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Dan L. Longo(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Cynthia M. Loeffler(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Daniel W. McVicar(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Augusto C. Ochoa(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research)
Science
December 11, 1992
Cited by 638

Abstract

Impaired immune responses occur frequently in cancer patients or in tumor-bearing mice, but the mechanisms of the tumor-induced immune defects remain poorly understood. In an in vivo murine colon carcinoma model (MCA-38), animals bearing a tumor longer than 26 days develop CD8+ T cells with impaired cytotoxic function, decreased expression of the tumor necrosis factor-alpha and granzyme B genes, and decreased ability to mediate an antitumor response in vivo. T lymphocytes from tumor-bearing mice expressed T cell antigen receptors that contained low amounts of CD3 gamma and completely lacked CD3 zeta, which was replaced by the Fc epsilon gamma-chain. Expression of the tyrosine kinases p56lck and p59fyn was also reduced. These changes could be the basis of immune defects in tumor-bearing hosts.


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