Litcius/Paper detail

Interleukin-9 Inhibits Lung Metastasis of Melanoma through Stimulating Anti-Tumor M1 Macrophages.

Sang Min Park, Van Anh Do-Thi, Jie‐Oh Lee, Hayyoung Lee, Young Sang Kim

2020PubMed27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

T cells, NK cells, and M1 macrophages considerably increased in the lungs of the mice injected with IL-9 expressing cells. Among them, the M1 macrophage subset was the most significantly enhanced. Furthermore, peritoneal macrophages, which were stimulated with either sIL-9 or mbIL-9 expressing transfectant, exerted higher anti-tumor cytotoxicity compared with that of the mock control. The IL-9-stimulated peritoneal macrophages were highly polarized to M1 phenotype. Stimulation of RAW264.7 macrophages with sIL-9 or mbIL-9 expressing cells also significantly increased the cytotoxicity of those macrophages against wild-type B16F10 cells. These results clearly demonstrate that IL-9 can induce an anti-metastasis effect by enhancing the polarization and proliferation of M1 macrophages.

Topics & Concepts

MetastasisCancer researchTumor necrosis factor alphaMelanomaMacrophageCytotoxicityInterleukin 12Cytotoxic T cellCD8ChemistryImmunologyBiologyMolecular biologyImmune systemMedicineIn vitroCancerInternal medicineBiochemistryImmune cells in cancerImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesCancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers