Summary Mice grafted with the 3LL (Lewis lung) carcinoma exhibit immune suppression: spleen cells showed decreased spontaneous interleukin 2 (IL-2) production and T-CD4+ and T-CD8+ lymphocyte populations; in addition the polyamine content in the spleen was increased. By treating the mice with a polyamine-deficient diet containing neomycin, metronidazole and inhibitors of ornithine decarboxylase and polyamine oxydase, tumour growth was reduced and the immune abnormalities were reversed. The spleen cells overproduced IL-2 by reducing exogenous sources of polyamines, but total blockade of all major polyamine sources was necessary to obtain an optimal effect both on IL-2 production and on spleen polyamine content. Irrespective of whether polyamine deprivation was started at an early or at an advanced stage of tumour growth, T-lymphocyte populations were restored to normal values, demonstrating that polyamine deprivation not only prevents tumour-induced immune suppression, but reverses established immunological disorders. In contrast to what was observed regarding IL-2 production by spleen cells and natural killer (NK) cell activity, the polyamine oxidase (PAO) inhibitor did not enhance the number of T lymphocytes. These findings are consistent with a direct effect of the polyamines on immune effector cell metabolism. They suggest an important role of the gastrointestinal polyamines and of PAO activity in the regulation of IL-2 production.
Since only a small proportion of the intracellular polyamines is accessible to the bulky antibodies, treatment with hydrolytic enzymes (DNase, RNase) is necessary to reveal specific compartments of the polyamines and to demonstrate qualitative and semiquantitative differences of their distribution within cells.
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