Protease inhibitors interfere with the transforming growth factor-beta-dependent but not the transforming growth factor-beta-independent pathway of tumor cell-mediated immunosuppression


     Related Videos
TEDxLansing - John Hill - Affiliation Nation TEDx Lansing's Inter-Connectivity
Inter-Podiatric College Student Research Symposium IPCSRS Podiatry

     Related Hubpages

    •  Doc. Url:    Embed Code: 

    • PubMed  status
      (0) (0 Votes)
      Views: (1064)   Date: (20-01-09)   Pages: ()
    • Author:  Huber D  Philipp J  Fontana A.  

    • Abstract:  Protease inhibitors interfere with the transforming growth factor-beta-dependen t but not the transforming growth factor-beta-independ ent pathway of tumor cell-mediated immunosuppression. Huber D, Philipp J, Fontana A. Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital, Z?rich, Switzerland. Tumor cells have been reported to exert inhibitory effects on the activation of T lymphocytes in vitro. We show that the IL-2-stimulated proliferation of a Th cell line is suppressed when the T cells are cocultured with human glioblastoma and melanoma cell lines. The use of two Th cell clones that differ in their responsiveness to growth-inhibition by transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and the analysis of tumor cell-derived supernatants as well as of TGF-beta 1/TGF-beta 2 gene expression allowed to distinguish two pathways of tumor-induced immunosuppression. Glioblastoma cells exert their immunosuppressive effects by producing biologically active TGF-beta 2, whereas the immunosuppressive state induced by melanoma cells is TGF-beta-independent and requires direct contact between tumor cell and T cell. The TGF-beta-dependent immunosuppression is down-regulated by various protease inhibitors and up-regulated by estradiol via modulation of the production of biologically active TGF-beta 2 by glioblastoma cells leaving total activatable TGF-beta 2 unaffected. No such modulation is functional for the TGF-beta-independent pathway of immunosuppression. We conclude that the production of active TGF-beta by tumor cells is regulated at a posttranslational level by the coordinated action of several proteolytic enzymes. PMID: 1727872 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

         Related Documents

           Related Groups

             Related Science News

               More on Sciencestage

                 Answers

                 News

                 Related on Wikipedia




























               

              Powered free by PHPmotion