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Chemotactic inhibitors in sera of patients with...
Journal article

Chemotactic inhibitors in sera of patients with neoplastic disease.

Abstract

Our objective was to define the functional characteristics of chemotactic inhibitors in sera of patients with various neoplastic diseases. Fifty-nine patients were studied: lung cancer (15), breast cancer (11), lymphoma (20), leukemia (13). Chemotaxis and random motility were measured using a modified agarose technique with C5a and a bacterial filtrate of E. coli as the chemoattractants. Two types of inhibitors were found: chemotactic factor inhibitors and cell-directed inhibitors. The type of inhibitor as well as the specificity of the inhibitor for the chemoattractant (C5a or bacterial filtrate) varied depending upon the underlying neoplasm. Cell-directed inhibitors were reversible and none of the inhibitors affected random motility. Contrary to previous reports, the chemotactic factor inhibitors were heat-stable (p less than 0.001). Morphometric analysis of inhibited and non-inhibited cells using scanning electron photomicrographs showed a significant alteration in shape of the inhibited cells (p less than 0.003). The results indicate greater heterogeneity of the chemotactic inhibitors than was previously thought, as well as a tumour-dependent specificity of the inhibitors for the chemoattractants.

Authors

Mandell LA; Afnan M

Journal

Clinical & Investigative Medicine, Vol. 14, No. 2, pp. 131–141

Publication Date

January 1, 1991

ISSN

0147-958X

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