Yamashiro S, Takeya M, Nishi T, Kuratsu J, Yoshimura T, Ushio Y, Takahashi K
Second Department of Pathology, Kumamoto University School of Medicine, Japan.
Am J Pathol. 1994 Oct;145(4):856-67.
By immunohistochemistry using anti-rat macrophage monoclonal antibodies RM-1, ED1, ED2, ED3, TRPM-3, and Ki-M2R, we studied transplanted rat tumors of 9L (rat gliosarcoma), Ad-2 (rat mammary carcinoma), and MT-P (rat malignant fibrous histiocytoma) cell lines to examine the distribution pattern of macrophages within and around the tumors. Most tumor-associated macrophages expressed RM-1, ED1, and Ia antigens, indicating activated macrophages. Based on differences in their immunophenotypical expression, these macrophages were distinguished into two major subpopulations. One expressed TRPM-3 and/or ED3, and the other was positive for ED2 and Ki-M2R. The former was considered to be monocyte-derived macrophages, whereas the latter showed the immunophenotype of tissue-fixed, resident macrophages. Infiltration and distribution patterns in the two macrophage subpopulations differed in the three different tumors. Monocyte-derived, activated macrophages infiltrated into 9L- and Ad-2-transplanted tumors, which markedly produced monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1). Additionally, numerous ED2- and Ki-M2R-positive macrophages were observed within the Ad-2-transplanted tumors, and some of them expressed TRPM-3. However, there were few macrophages in the MT-P-transplanted tumors that showed no MCP-1 production. In transplanted tumors of four MT-P/MCP-1 cell lines established by transfecting a rat MCP-1 gene expression vector (pCEP4/MCP-1) into the MT-P cell line, different levels of MCP-1 production were detected, which correlated well with the numbers of intratumorally infiltrated TRPM-3-positive macrophages. In contrast, ED2- and Ki-M2R-positive macrophages were not detected in any MT-P/MCP-1-transplanted tumors. MT-P/MCP-1-transplanted tumors exhibited lower growth rate than parental MT-P-transplanted tumors. These results indicate that tumor-derived MCP-1 induces intratumoral infiltration of monocyte-derived macrophages, but not macrophages with the immunophenotype of tissue-fixed, resident type. The former population of macrophages seems to have a suppressive effect on the growth of tumors.
通过使用抗大鼠巨噬细胞单克隆抗体RM-1、ED1、ED2、ED3、TRPM-3和Ki-M2R进行免疫组织化学,我们研究了9L(大鼠胶质肉瘤)、Ad-2(大鼠乳腺癌)和MT-P(大鼠恶性纤维组织细胞瘤)细胞系的移植大鼠肿瘤,以检查肿瘤内部和周围巨噬细胞的分布模式。大多数肿瘤相关巨噬细胞表达RM-1、ED1和Ia抗原,表明为活化巨噬细胞。基于它们免疫表型表达的差异,这些巨噬细胞被分为两个主要亚群。一个表达TRPM-3和/或ED3,另一个对ED2和Ki-M2R呈阳性。前者被认为是单核细胞衍生的巨噬细胞,而后者显示出组织固定的驻留巨噬细胞的免疫表型。两种巨噬细胞亚群在三种不同肿瘤中的浸润和分布模式不同。单核细胞衍生的活化巨噬细胞浸润到9L和Ad-2移植肿瘤中,这些肿瘤显著产生单核细胞趋化蛋白-1(MCP-1)。此外,在Ad-2移植肿瘤内观察到大量ED2和Ki-M2R阳性巨噬细胞,其中一些表达TRPM-3。然而,MT-P移植肿瘤中几乎没有巨噬细胞,且不产生MCP-1。在通过将大鼠MCP-1基因表达载体(pCEP4/MCP-1)转染到MT-P细胞系而建立的四种MT-P/MCP-1细胞系的移植肿瘤中,检测到不同水平的MCP-1产生,这与肿瘤内浸润的TRPM-3阳性巨噬细胞数量密切相关。相反,在任何MT-P/MCP-1移植肿瘤中均未检测到ED2和Ki-M2R阳性巨噬细胞。MT-P/MCP-1移植肿瘤的生长速度低于亲本MT-P移植肿瘤。这些结果表明,肿瘤衍生的MCP-1诱导单核细胞衍生的巨噬细胞浸润到肿瘤内,但不诱导具有组织固定驻留型免疫表型的巨噬细胞浸润。前一种巨噬细胞群体似乎对肿瘤生长具有抑制作用。