ONO-4007 is a synthetic lipid A analog that exhibits strong antitumor
activity in several animal models via intratumoral
production of tumor necrosis factor (TNF). In the present study, the
cytokine-inducing effect of ONO-4007 was investigated in human
monocytes that were freshly isolated or had been incubated for 3 days
with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or
macrophage colony-stimulating factor. ONO-4007 induced slight
production of TNF-
, Interleukin (IL)-1
, IL-6 and IL-12 in fresh
monocytes but strongly induced TNF-
production in GM-CSF-treated
monocytes. Monocytes treated with macrophage colony-stimulating factor
were also primed to produce TNF-
in response to ONO-4007. In the
production of IL-1
, IL-6 and IL-12, GM-CSF did not show a priming
effect. In contrast to ONO-4007, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced
significant amounts of all these cytokines in fresh monocytes. In whole
blood, ONO-4007 failed to induce TNF-
, whereas LPS and LA-15-PP
(Escherichia coli-type lipid A) strongly induced TNF-
production. In the GM-CSF-treated monocytes, both elimination of serum
from the culture medium and anti-CD14 antibody treatment attenuated
LPS-induced TNF-
production but not ONO-4007-induced TNF-
production. This study shows that ONO-4007 activates human
monocytes/macrophages to release TNF-
only in a primed state and
suggests that ONO-4007 would activate these cells via
different pathways from LPS. These differences could mean that ONO-4007
has potent antitumor activity with lower toxicity than LPS.
 |
Introduction |
LPS
is a component of the cell wall of Gram-negative bacteria that exhibits
a variety of biological activities, including both toxicity and
immunopotentiating activity (Homma et al., 1985
; Kanegasaki
et al., 1986
). The lipid moiety, lipid A, is an active part
of LPS. Lipid A and its analogs exhibit various immunopharmacological activities, i.e., activation of macrophages (Matsuura
et al., 1995
), immunoadjuvant activity (Takada et
al., 1985
; Ulrich and Myers, 1995
), B cell mitogenicity (Kotani
et al., 1983
), induction of resistance to bacterial
infection (Schutze et al., 1994
) and antitumor activity
(Nakatsuka et al., 1989
). ONO-4007, sodium 2-deoxy-2-[3S-(9-phenylnonanoyloxy)tetradecanoyl]-amino-3-O-(9-phenylnonanoyl)-D-glucopyranose 4-sulfate (fig. 1), is a
monosaccharide lipid A analog with low toxicity. ONO-4007 exhibits
strong antitumor activity via intratumoral TNF production
and induces macrophages to a tumorcidal state in MM46 mammary
carcinoma-bearing mice (Yang et al., 1994
). ONO-4007 also
induces high levels of TNF within tumor tissue in KDH-8
hepatoma-bearing rats (Kuramitsu et al., 1997
), and
intratumoral injection of anti-TNF-
antibody attenuates the
antitumor activity of ONO-4007 (N. Matsumoto and A. Akimoto,
unpublished observation). These findings suggest that the antitumor
effect of ONO-4007 is mediated by endogenous TNF-
production from
tumor-infiltrating macrophages. TNF-inducing activity of ONO-4007 in
human monocytes/macrophages, however, has not been examined.
Several analogs of lipid A have been shown to display species-specific
pharmacological activities. For example, GLA-60, a monosaccharide lipid
A analog, activates both human monocytes (Maeda et al.,
1990
) and murine macrophages (Matsuura et al., 1995
),
whereas lipid IVA, a disaccharide precursor of lipid A, inhibits LPS-induced activation of human monocytes although it activates murine macrophages (Golenbock et al., 1991
; Delude
et al., 1995
), and Rhodobacter sphaeroides lipid
A inhibits LPS-induced activation of both human monocytes and murine
macrophages (Golenbock et al., 1991
; Delude et
al., 1995
). In contrast to its effects in mice and rats, ONO-4007
has little or no ability to induce TNF production when injected into
cynomolgus monkeys, dogs or rabbits (N. Matsumoto and A. Akimoto,
unpublished observation), which suggests that the pharmacological
features of ONO-4007 are species-specific.
GM-CSF and M-CSF enhance the survival (Erickson-Miller et
al., 1990
) and differentiation (Geissler et al., 1989
;
Dimri et al., 1994
; Hashimoto et al., 1997
) of
cultured human monocytes. Moreover, pretreatment of human monocytes
with GM-CSF (Cannistra et al., 1988
) or M-CSF
(Sampson-Johannes and Carlino, 1988
; Asakura et al., 1996
)
enhances TNF-
production in response to subsequent LPS stimulation,
a result that indicates functional priming activity of GM-CSF and M-CSF
on human monocytes.
In this study, to elucidate cytokine-inducing activity of ONO-4007 in
human monocytes/macrophages, we used freshly isolated human monocytes
and monocytes functionally primed by incubation with GM-CSF or M-CSF
and investigated the induction of cytokines (TNF-
, IL-1
, IL-6 and
IL-12) in response to ONO-4007. In comparison with ONO-4007, LPS
derived from Salmonella abortus equi was used as a reference
agent, because clinical trials in cancer patients have been reported
(Engelhardt et al., 1991
and 1995
).
 |
Materials and Methods |
Materials.
ONO-4007, synthesized at Ono Pharmaceutical Co.,
Ltd (Osaka, Japan), was dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide and further
diluted with culture medium for monocyte activation or added to whole blood (final dimethyl sulfoxide concentration, 0.1% and 0.5%, respectively). LPS from Salmonella abortus equi was obtained
from Sigma (St. Louis, MO), LA-15-PP (Escherichia coli-type
synthetic lipid A) from Daiichi Pure Chemicals (Tokyo, Japan), rhGM-CSF (2.05 × 108 U/mg) from Genzyme (Cambridge, MA),
rhM-CSF (6.5 × 107 U/mg) from Cellular Products
(Buffalo, NY) and monoclonal anti-CD14 (RMO52) from Cosmo Bio (Tokyo,
Japan). The culture medium consisted of RPMI-1640 (Nissui
Pharmaceutical, Tokyo, Japan) supplemented with 0.3 g/l glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin and 10% FCS (Gibco-BRL,
Grand Island, NY).
Monocyte separation.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were
obtained from heparinized venous blood of healthy adults by density
centrifugation with Lymphocyte Separation Medium (Organon Teknika,
Durham, NC). Mononuclear cells suspended in culture medium were
incubated in autologous serum-coated dishes at 37°C for 60 min. Then
nonadherent cells were removed by three washes with prewarmed culture
medium, and adherent cells were collected by treatment with 1 mM EDTA. The adherent cells were found to be
93% monocytes by Wright stain.
Cell culture.
All cell cultures were performed at 37°C in
5% CO2/95% air and 100% humidity. Monocytes, freshly
isolated or preincubated for 3 days in the presence of GM-CSF or M-CSF
in 24-well culture plates, were washed and stimulated with ONO-4007 or
LPS for 3, 6 or 24 h. Heparinized whole blood of healthy adults
was stimulated with ONO-4007, LA-15-PP or LPS for 6 h.
Supernatants were obtained by centrifugation and stored below
20°C
until measurement of cytokines. To assess the requirement of serum in
TNF-
production, we compared the effect of FCS-free medium with the
effect of culture medium containing 10% FCS when GM-CSF-treated
monocytes were stimulated with ONO-4007 or LPS. To assess the effect of
anti-CD14 on TNF-
production in GM-CSF-treated monocytes, we added
anti-CD14 antibody (10 µg/ml) to cultures 15 min before stimulation.
Cytokine determination by ELISA.
Concentrations of TNF-
,
IL-1
, IL-6 and IL-12 (p70) in the culture supernatants were assayed
with commercially available ELISA kits (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN)
as directed by the manufacturer. The detection limits of these assays
were 4.4 pg/ml for TNF-
, 1.2 pg/ml for IL-1
, 2.8 pg/ml for IL-6
and 5.0 pg/ml for IL-12.
TNF bioassay.
TNF activities in supernatant samples were
measured by L929 cell cytotoxicity in the presence of actinomycin D
(Ruff and Gifford, 1980
; Flick and Gifford, 1984
). L929 cells (3 × 104 cells/well) in 96-well culture plates were incubated
with serially diluted samples in the presence of 1 µg/ml actinomycin
D for 19 h. Cell viability was assessed by incubating the cells
with 0.5 mg/ml MTT for another 5 h. Then the MTT-formazan produced
by viable cells was dissolved in ethanol, and optical density (570-690
nm) was read (Denizot and Lang, 1986
). An international standard
rhTNF-
(1st International Standard for TNF-
[Human rDNA],
National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, Hertfordshire,
UK) was used as an assay calibrant. TNF activities in culture
supernatants were expressed as I.U./ml.
Statistics.
All data are presented as means ± S.E.
Differences in cytokine production for freshly isolated and
GM-CSF-treated monocytes were analyzed by two-way analysis of variance
(ANOVA). Priming effects of GM-CSF or M-CSF on TNF-
production were
analyzed by one-way ANOVA followed by Dunnett's test. The effect of
anti-CD14 on TNF-
production was analyzed by paired t
test. Values less than .05 were considered statistically significant.
 |
Results |
Induction of TNF-
, IL-1
, IL-6 and IL-12 by ONO-4007 or LPS in
monocytes freshly isolated or incubated with GM-CSF.
First, we
compared the cytokine-inducing activity of ONO-4007 (100 µg/ml) in
monocytes freshly isolated or incubated for 3 days in the presence of
GM-CSF (100 U/ml) with that of LPS (0.1 µg/ml). The results indicate
that cytokine induction by ONO-4007 in fresh monocytes was very weak;
the levels of IL-1
and IL-12 production were marginal or
undetectable, and the peak levels of TNF-
(6 h) and IL-6 (24 h)
production were 2.4% and 1.8% of the peak levels in monocytes
stimulated with LPS, respectively (table
1). In contrast to the response to
ONO-4007, fresh monocytes produced significant amounts of these
cytokines in response to LPS. After preincubation with GM-CSF, monocyte
production of TNF-
in response to ONO-4007 increased dramatically to
12 times that in fresh monocytes (820 ± 180 vs.
69 ± 11 pg/ml). However, GM-CSF-treatment did not affect IL-6
production in response to ONO-4007, and it made IL-1
and IL-12
production almost undetectable. The level of TNF-
production in
response to LPS was increased 2.2-fold by GM-CSF-treatment, whereas
IL-6 production and IL-12 production were not affected by the
treatment, and IL-1
production was dramatically attenuated.
Dose-dependent effect of ONO-4007 and LPS on TNF-
production.
Then we examined the effect of various concentrations
of ONO-4007 and LPS on TNF-
production in both freshly isolated and GM-CSF-treated monocytes. In fresh monocytes, slight production of
TNF-
was observed at 100 and 300 µg/ml of ONO-4007 (fig.
2). In GM-CSF-treated monocytes, however,
ONO-4007 induced significant amounts of TNF-
production in a
dose-dependent manner (14 ± 3 pg/ml at 1 µg/ml and 1577 ± 314 pg/ml at 300 µg/ml). At 300 µg/ml of ONO-4007, the levels of
TNF-
production in GM-CSF-treated monocytes were 16 times greater
than those in fresh monocytes. LPS-induced TNF-
production in
GM-CSF-treated monocytes was also greater than that in fresh monocytes,
but it represented only a 2.0- to 2.6-fold increase.

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Fig. 2.
Effect of various concentrations of ONO-4007 and LPS
on TNF- production. Monocytes (5 × 104 cells/ml)
freshly isolated or incubated for 3 days in the presence of GM-CSF (100 U/ml) were washed and stimulated with the indicated concentrations of
ONO-4007 or LPS for 6 h (n = 4). The
concentrations of TNF- in culture supernatants were measured by
ELISA. Two-way ANOVA confirmed that GM-CSF-treatment increased both
ONO-4007-induced and LPS-induced TNF- production.
|
|
Priming effects of GM-CSF and M-CSF on ONO-4007- or LPS-induced
TNF-
production.
Because both M-CSF and GM-CSF are known to be
priming agents for monocyte/macrophage activation, we examined the
dose-dependent effect of GM-CSF and M-CSF on monocyte TNF-
production. Monocytes were incubated for 3 days in the presence of 1 to
1000 U/ml of either GM-CSF or M-CSF and then we stimulated with
ONO-4007 (300 µg/ml) or LPS (1 µg/ml). Preincubation with GM-CSF
augmented monocyte TNF-
production at 10 U/ml and higher
concentrations when the monocytes were stimulated with ONO-4007 and at
1 U/ml and higher concentrations when they were stimulated with LPS
(fig. 3). Preincubation with M-CSF at
1000 U/ml also augmented both ONO-4007- and LPS-induced TNF-
production. Next we examined the effects of GM-CSF and M-CSF on
monocyte survival. Monocytes were incubated for 3 days with GM-CSF (100 U/ml) or M-CSF (1000 U/ml), and the recovered cells were counted. The
survival rate of monocytes incubated with culture medium alone was
27.5%, whereas the treatment with GM-CSF and treatment with M-CSF
improved the survival to 64.9% and 53.9%, respectively (table
2).

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Fig. 3.
Priming effects of GM-CSF and M-CSF on ONO-4007- or
LPS-induced TNF- production. Monocytes (5 × 104
cells/ml) incubated for 3 days with the indicated concentrations of
GM-CSF or M-CSF were washed and stimulated with ONO-4007 (300 µg/ml)
or LPS (1 µg/ml) for 6 h (n = 3). The
concentrations of TNF- in culture supernatants were measured by
ELISA. * P < .05, ** P < .01 vs. medium
alone.
|
|
ONO-4007-, lipid A- or LPS-induced TNF-
production in whole
blood.
To examine the effect of the possible interaction of
monocytes with other leukocytes or serum factors on TNF-
production, we examined ONO-4007-, LA-15-PP (synthetic lipid A)- and LPS-induced TNF-
production in whole blood. TNF-
production in response to
ONO-4007 (10, 30, 100 and 300 µg/ml) was marginal (13.2 ± 2.0 pg/ml at 300 µg/ml) (fig. 4). In
contrast to ONO-4007, LA-15-PP and LPS induced significant amounts of
TNF-
production at 100 pg/ml and higher concentrations; the levels
of TNF-
production in response to 1 µg/ml of LA-15-PP and LPS were
15423 ± 1655 and 25014 ± 5066 pg/ml, respectively.

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Fig. 4.
ONO-4007-, LA-15-PP- or LPS-induced TNF-
production in whole blood. Whole blood was stimulated with the
indicated concentrations of the test compounds for 6 h
(n = 3). The concentrations of TNF- in supernatants
were measured by ELISA.
|
|
Requirement of FCS for ONO-4007- or LPS-induced TNF
production.
We next examined the requirement of FCS in culture
medium for the induction of TNF activity in freshly isolated and
GM-CSF-treated monocytes. When serum-free medium was used for monocyte
activation, ONO-4007-induced TNF production by fresh monocytes was
attenuated, but that by GM-CSF-treated monocytes was observed from 1 µg/ml of ONO-4007 and to a maximum at 10 µg/ml, at which
concentration the levels of TNF production were 9 times greater than
those stimulated in serum-containing medium (fig.
5). TNF production at 30 and 100 µg/ml
of ONO-4007, however, declined when GM-CSF-treated monocytes were
stimulated in serum-free medium. We also observed cellular swelling and
decreased number of cultured monocytes when the monocytes were
stimulated with 30 and 100 µg/ml of ONO-4007 in serum-free medium,
which suggests cytotoxicity of ONO-4007 in these culture conditions.
The levels of LPS-induced TNF production by both fresh and
GM-CSF-treated monocytes were attenuated when serum-free medium was
used for monocyte activation.

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Fig. 5.
Requirement of FCS for ONO-4007- or LPS-induced TNF
production. Monocytes (5 × 104 cells/ml) freshly
isolated ( ) or incubated for 3 days with 100 U/ml GM-CSF ( ) were
washed and stimulated with ONO-4007 or LPS in 10% FCS-containing or
serum-free culture medium for 6 h (n = 4). TNF
activities in culture supernatants were measured by L929 cell
cytotoxicity. The detection limit of the assay was 1.3 I.U./ml. Two-way
ANOVA confirmed that GM-CSF treatment increased both ONO-4007- and
LPS-induced TNF- production when FCS-containing medium was used for
monocyte activation and that it increased ONO-4007-induced TNF-
production when serum-free medium was used.
|
|
Effect of anti-CD14 on ONO-4007- or LPS-induced TNF-
production.
Finally, we examined the effect of anti-CD14 (RMO52)
on TNF-
production in GM-CSF-treated monocytes. Anti-CD14 treatment completely suppressed TNF-
production in response to 0.1 ng/ml of
LPS, but not in response to 30 or 300 µg/ml of ONO-4007 or to 1 µg/ml of LPS (table 3).
Correlation of TNF activity with TNF-
ELISA.
TNF activities
in monocyte supernatant samples shown in tables 1 and 3 and figures 2
and 3 were assessed by L929 cell cytotoxicity as well as by ELISA. TNF
activities measured by L929 cell cytotoxicity correlated well with
TNF-
concentrations measured by ELISA (fig. 6).
 |
Discussion |
This study investigated the cytokine-inducing effect of ONO-4007,
a synthetic lipid A analog, on human monocytes/macrophages. ONO-4007
clearly induced TNF-
production from GM-CSF- or M-CSF-treated monocytes, but not from fresh monocytes or whole blood. The present observations are consistent with reports that pretreatment of human
monocytes with GM-CSF (Cannistra et al., 1988
) or M-CSF (Sampson-Johannes and Carlino, 1988
; Asakura et al., 1996
)
enhances LPS-induced TNF-
production. Priming effects of GM-CSF or
M-CSF were more pronounced when ONO-4007 was used for monocyte
activation; the levels of ONO-4007-induced TNF-
production in
pretreated monocytes increased to 12 to 16 times those in fresh
monocytes, whereas LPS-induced production was increased only 2.0- to
2.6-fold by the pretreatment. Present findings also showed that both
GM-CSF and M-CSF improved the survival of cultured monocytes, but the cell numbers did not increase during incubation. These results suggest
that the effect of GM-CSF or M-CSF on TNF-
production is exerted by
functional priming rather than stimulation of cell growth. Although the
cytokine-inducing effect of ONO-4007 was weak in fresh monocytes, other
leukocytes such as lymphocytes and neutrophils or serum factors might
modulate TNF-
production in response to ONO-4007. Therefore, we
examined TNF-
production in whole blood. In contrast to synthetic
lipid A and LPS, ONO-4007 was less active in whole blood than in fresh
monocytes; that is, the levels of ONO-4007-induced TNF-
production
in whole blood were marginal, whereas the levels of LPS-induced TNF-
production were greater than those in fresh monocytes. These findings
suggest that monocyte separation and adherence to a plastic plate
(Ralph and Sampson-Johannes, 1990
) somewhat prime monocytes for
subsequent stimulation by ONO-4007 and that, therefore, ONO-4007 might
not induce TNF-
production in nonstimulated blood monocytes. M-CSF is present at 100 to 200 U/ml in normal human sera (Das et
al., 1981
; Logan et al., 1996
), but the results of this
study showed that 1000 U/ml of M-CSF is required for monocyte priming,
which is consistent with the inability of ONO-4007 to release TNF-
in whole blood. LPS-induced IL-1
production declined dramatically in
monocytes pretreated with GM-CSF. This agrees with previous reports
that IL-1
release in response to LPS was suppressed during monocyte
maturation both in vivo (Herzyk et al., 1992
) and
in vitro (Hogquist et al., 1991
).
There were several differences between the effects of ONO-4007 and LPS
on monocyte activation: 1) More than 1 µg/ml of ONO-4007 was required
for monocyte TNF-
production, whereas as little as 0.1 ng/ml of LPS
was sufficient for TNF-
production. 2) The effect of ONO-4007 on the
induction of IL-1
, IL-6 and IL-12 production was much weaker than
that of LPS. 3) ONO-4007 induced TNF-
production only in monocytes
pretreated with GM-CSF or M-CSF, whereas LPS induced TNF-
production
in both freshly isolated and pretreated monocytes. These differences
suggest that cell activating pathways of ONO-4007 are different from
those of LPS. It has been shown that LPS at very low levels (<1 ng/ml)
binds to the serum protein LBP via the lipid A moiety
(Schumann et al., 1990
). This complex then binds to a
receptor, CD14, present on the surface of monocytes/macrophages and
activates these cells to produce cytokines, including TNF-
(Wright
et al., 1990
; Kirkland et al., 1993
). Monocyte
activation by very low levels (<1 ng/ml) of LPS is inhibited by
anti-CD14 treatment (Wright et al., 1990
) or by elimination
of LBP in the culture medium (Meszaros et al., 1995
). It has
also been observed that TNF-
synthesis in response to 10 ng/ml of
LPS occurs in the absence of both LBP (Schumann et al.,
1990
) and CD14 (Heumann et al., 1992
), which implies that
LPS and lipid A can activate monocytes/macrophages via
LBP/CD14-independent pathway(s). The present study showed that low
concentrations (1, 3 and 10 µg/ml) of ONO-4007 induced greater
TNF-
production in FCS-free medium than in FCS-containing medium,
whereas LPS-induced TNF-
production was attenuated by serum
elimination. It was reported that bovine LBP in FCS was able to
interact with human CD14 (Heumann et al., 1992
). Moreover,
anti-CD14 antibody treatment did not influence ONO-4007-induced TNF-
production. However, this treatment attenuated TNF-
production in
response to 0.1 ng/ml, but not to 1 µg/ml, of LPS, in accordance with
previous observations (Schumann et al., 1990
; Heumann
et al., 1992
). These results suggest that ONO-4007 induces
TNF-
production in monocytes via LBP/CD14-independent pathways, whereas LPS uses both LBP/CD14-dependent and -independent pathways. It has been observed that ONO-4007 binds to human serum albumin and that bovine serum albumin added to culture attenuates the
cytotoxic effect of ONO-4007 on endothelial cells (N. Matsumoto and A. Akimoto, unpublished observation). This indicates that serum albumin
binds to ONO-4007 and inhibits the activity of ONO-4007. Elevated
TNF-
production at 1, 3 and 10 µg/ml and cytotoxicity at 30 and
100 µg/ml of ONO-4007 in FCS-free medium could be due to the absence
of serum albumin in the culture medium.
GM-CSF is secreted by various cell types (activated T cells, activated
macrophages, endothelial cells and fibroblasts) in response to
antigenic or inflammatory stimulus (Dipersio, 1990
; Monroy et
al., 1990
). M-CSF is constitutively secreted by fibroblasts, endothelial cells and epithelial cells (Ralph and Sampson-Johannes, 1990
). Human monocytes produce M-CSF for their own use in response to
inflammatory stimulus (Ralph and Sampson-Johannes, 1990
). Moreover, tumor cells often produce M-CSF at high levels, as has been
demonstrated in ovarian (Bauknecht et al., 1994
),
endometrial (Ramakrishnan et al., 1989
), pulmonary
(Horiguchi et al., 1988
), pancreatic (Ralph et
al., 1986
) and breast cancer (Kacinski et al., 1991
). Tang et al. (1990)
reported that M-CSF expression of tumor
cells strongly correlated with the infiltration of macrophages and
lymphocytes in human breast carcinoma. These reports suggest that
tumor-infiltrating macrophages in cancer patients would be primed for
ONO-4007 stimulation if some immune responses were generated in their
tumor tissues or if the cancer cells themselves secreted M-CSF.
In the present study, we used as a reference agent LPS from
Salmonella abortus equi, which has been used in clinical
phase I and II trials in cancer patients (Engelhardt et al.,
1991
and 1995
). In these studies, tumor response was observed in
several patients with colorectal carcinoma; however, side effects such as fever, chill, hepatic toxicity and hypotension were also observed. Serum TNF-
levels in patients treated with a therapeutic dose (4 ng/kg b.wt.) of LPS were elevated to 3 to 10 ng/ml. The toxic side
effects of LPS are thought to be exerted via systemic
activation of monocytes/macrophages, because LPS strongly activates
monocytes to release proinflammatory cytokines, including TNF-
, in
both fresh and primed monocytes. Because ONO-4007 activates human
monocytes/macrophages to release TNF-
only in a primed state, it
would activate only tumor-infiltrating primed macrophages in cancer
patients, not blood monocytes or resting tissue macrophages. Therefore,
ONO-4007 might show potent antitumor activity with relatively low
toxicity compared with LPS in cancer patients.
In conclusion, this study shows that ONO-4007 activates human
monocytes/macrophages to release TNF-
only in a primed state and
suggests that ONO-4007 would activate these cells via
different pathways than would LPS.
We are grateful to Mrs. Yuki Mori for her technical assistance.
Accepted for publication September 5, 1997.
Received for publication July 8, 1997.
ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay;
FCS, fetal calf serum;
GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating
factor;
IL, interleukin;
LBP, LPS-binding protein;
LPS, lipopolysaccharide;
M-CSF, macrophage colony-stimulating factor;
MTT, 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide;
TNF, tumor necrosis factor.