68 research outputs found

    Effect of intraperitoneally administered recombinant murine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rmGM-CSF) on the cytotoxic potential of murine peritoneal cells

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    We studied the effect of recombinant murine granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor(rmGM-CSF) on the cytotoxic potential of murine peritoneal cells. Mice received rmGM-CSF intraperitoneally using different dosages and injection schemes. At different time points after the last injection, mice were sacrificed, peritoneal cells isolated and their tumour cytotoxicity was determined by a cytotoxicity assay using syngeneic [methyl-3H]thymidine-labelled colon carcinoma cells. Also, the cytotoxic response to a subsequent in vitro stimulation with lipopolysaccharide was determined. Upon daily injection of 6000–54 000 U rmGM-CSF over a 6-day period, the number of peritoneal cells increased over ten fold with the highest rmGM-CSF dose. Increases in cell numbers was mainly due to increases in macrophage numbers. Upon injection of three doses of 3000 U rmGM-CSF per day for 3 consecutive days, the number of macrophages remained elevated for minimally 6 days. Although the peritoneal cells from rmGM-CSF-treated mice were not activated to a tumoricidal state, they could be activated to high levels of cytotoxicity with an additional in vitro stimulation of lipopolysaccharide. Resident cells isolated from control mice could be activated only to low levels of tumour cytotoxicity with lipopolysaccharide. Tumour cytotoxicity strongly correlated with nitric oxide secretion. When inhibiting nitric oxide synthase, tumour cell lysis decreased. Thus, the expanded peritoneal cell population induced by multiple injections of rmGM-CSF has a strong tumour cytotoxic potential and might provide a favourable condition for immunotherapeutic treatment of peritoneal neoplasms. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig

    Immunological Risk of Injectable Drug Delivery Systems

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    Uptake and processing of immunoglobulin-coated liposomes by subpopulations of rat liver macrophages

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    In vivo uptake and processing by liver macrophages (Kupffer cells) of liposomes, covalently coated with rabbit immunoglobulin (Ig liposomes) was studied following intravenous injection in rats. Rabbit Ig liposomes were labeled with trace amounts of cholesteryl[14C]oleate and [3H]cholesteryl hexadecyl ether. 1 h after injection of the liposomes, the non-parenchymal cells were isolated and subjected to centrifugal elutriation with stepwise-increasing flow rates; thus, five sub-fractions of Kupffer cells were obtained ranging in size from 9 to 14 micron in diameter. The cells were assayed for peroxidase activity and protein content. Rabbit Ig liposomes were taken up preferentially by Kupffer cells with diameters larger than 11 micron, which constitute less than 25% of the total Kupffer cell population. The intralysosomal degradation of the ingested liposomes was monitored by measuring the 3H/14C ratio of the cells. Due to the rapid release from the cells of the [14C]oleate formed from the cholesteryl[14C]oleate and the virtually complete retention of the non-metabolizable [3H]cholesteryl hexadecyl ether the 3H/14C ratio of the cells increases with proceeding hydrolysis of the liposomes. Thus, we were able to show that, in vivo, the Kupffer cells of the larger size classes, are not only more active in liposome uptake, but are also substantially more active in liposome degradation than smaller cells. The maintenance of the observed heterogeneity of rat liver Kupffer cells, with respect to liposome uptake under in vitro culture conditions, was examined. Subfractions were maintained in monolayer culture for 2 days and incubated with rabbit Ig liposomes. Binding and uptake of liposomes by the cells was monitored by measuring cell-associated radioactivity at 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C, respectively. In contrast to our in vivo results, we observed maximal in vitro liposome binding and uptake in those subfractions containing small cells (10-11 micron diameter), while the fractions containing cells larger than 12 micron, which were more active in vivo, were substantially less active than the smaller cells. The maximum we observed was even more pronounced when the liposome concentration was increased. We conclude that liver macrophage subfractions that barely participate in liposome uptake from the bloodstream in vivo, possess the potential to develop the capacity in vitro to phagocytose rabbit Ig-coated liposomes to extents equal to or even higher than the cells belonging to those subfractions containing the phagocytically most active cells under in vivo conditions

    Tumoricidal response of liver macrophages isolated from rats bearing liver metastases of colon adenocarcinoma

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    Intraportal inoculation of CC531 adenocarcinoma cells into syngeneic rats causes an increase of liver macrophage cell number but not of major histocompatibility complex class II antigen expression. On day I after inoculation of 10(5) CC531 cells, a fixed number of isolated liver macrophages lysed significantly more target cells in vitro than did control cells, This effect was still present after 4 weeks. A 10-fold higher initial tumor dose significantly suppressed the macrophage response during the first 2 weeks. In contrast to tumoricidal activity induced by lipopolysaccharide in vitro, the tumoricidal response following in vivo challenge with tumor cells appeared not closely related to the production of reactive nitrogen intermediates, as in the latter case it was not abrogated in the presence of nitric oxide synthase inhibitor. Furthermore, the liver macrophage population appeared not fully activated after tumor inoculation as lipopolysaccharide further increased tumoricidal activity in vitro, The observed numerical and functional response of liver macrophages to intraportally inoculated tumor cells points at an important role of these cells in aspecific immune reactivity aimed at the reduction of local tumor growth, Results suggest that mechanistic differences exist between macrophage tumoricidal activity induced by tumor cells as compared with lipopolysaccharide
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