We have examined whether pertussis toxin, an agent known to inhibit entry of normal lymphocytes into tissues, affects invasion and metastasis formation by malignant lymphoma and T-cell hybridoma cells. The toxin reduced invasion in vitro in hepatocyte cultures to 20% of control values. Inhibition was maximal after pretreatment for 2 h with approximately 100 ng/ml. The effect of pretreatment with 1 to 5 micrograms toxin/ml for 4 h persisted for at least 5 days, despite a more than 100-fold increase in cell number. The proliferation rate was not affected. Liver metastasis formation after tail vein injection of TAM2D2 T-cell hybridoma cells in syngeneic AKR mice, measured as liver weight, was reduced to 10 to 25% of controls after pretreatment of the cells for 4 h with 1 microgram pertussis toxin/ml. Metastasis to kidneys, ovaries, and lymph nodes was not, or less evidently, affected. With MB6A lymphosarcoma cells no effect was seen after treatment with 1 microgram/ml, but a significant reduction of the liver tumor burden to approximately 50% of controls was achieved by treatment with at least 5 micrograms toxin/ml. Spleen metastasis by MB6A cells was not affected. These results provide evidence for a similarity in invasion mechanisms of normal and malignant lymphoid cells, and they suggest that invasiveness is an important factor in the formation of lymphoma metastases, particularly in the liver.
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