Effects of Interferons and Tumour Necrosis Factor-α on Human Lung Cancer Cell Lines and the Development of an Interferon-Resistant Lung Cancer Cell Line

Authors

  • Eduardo Suarez Pestana National Institute for oncology and Radiobiology, Havana, Cuba
  • Gunilla Björklund Department of Pathology, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Rolf Larsson Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Peter Nygren Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Uppsala, Sweden; Department of Oncology, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Kenneth Nilsson Department of Pathology, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Jonas Bergh Department of Oncology, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869609109925

Abstract

Thirteen human lung cancer cell lines, 7 representing small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and 6 different types of non-SCLC, were tested for sensitivity to tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and interferon alpha and gamma (IFN-α and γ) using an automated fluorometric microculture cytotoxicity assay (FMCA). One SCLC line (H-82) was found to be sensitive to IFN-α in short-term (72 h) culture, whereas after prolonged (5 days) culture two additional SCLC cell lines responded to IFN-γ. TNF-α inhibited the growth of one large cell carcinoma cell line (H-157), whereas all SCLC lines were found to be insensitive. The combination of IFN-γ and TNF-α produced no further response compared with the single agents used alone. By continuous cultivation of the IFN-α-sensitive cell line H-82 in the presence of increasing concentrations of IFN-α, an IFN-α-resistant subline (H-82R) was established. This line displayed a high degree of resistance (>100 fold) to IFN-α and cross-resistance to IFN-γ. There was no alteration in the number of IFN binding sites, in the growth rate, the expression of selected surface markers for SCLC or the expression of multidrug resistance markers in the H-82R subline compared with the parental H-82 cell line. The results demonstrate a heterogeneous response of SCLC cell lines to IFN-α and γ and TNF-α with only a minority of the cell lines responding to these agents by growth inhibition. The IFN-α and γ H-82R subline may serve as a valuable tool in future studies on the mechanisms of IFN antitumour activity.

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Published

1996-01-01

How to Cite

Suarez Pestana, E., Björklund, G., Larsson, R., Nygren, P., Nilsson, K., & Bergh, J. (1996). Effects of Interferons and Tumour Necrosis Factor-α on Human Lung Cancer Cell Lines and the Development of an Interferon-Resistant Lung Cancer Cell Line. Acta Oncologica, 35(4), 473–478. https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869609109925