Abstract
After a 2-hr incubation with soluble immune response suppressor (SIRS), a product of concanavalin A-activated murine T cells, macrophages release a factor, M phi-derived suppressor factor (M phi-SF), which nonspecifically suppresses immune responses in vitro. The mechanism(s) of action of M phi-SF and range of cell types affected by M phi-SF have been investigated. M phi-SF suppressed antibody responses to background levels if added at culture initiation and by 80 to 90% if added as late as 2 hr before assay. Primary and secondary IgM and IgG antibody responses, proliferative responses to T cell and B cell mitogens, antibody and protein secretion, and the division of several tumor cell lines in culture were inhibited by M phi-SF. Division of synchronized tumor cells was inhibited when M phi-SF was added at any point prior to and during mitosis; this inhibition could be reversed with 2-mercaptoethanol. In the presence of M phi-SF, asynchronous tumor cells accumulated in the cell cycle just prior to cell division and could be released into mitosis by 2-mercaptoethanol. These data indicate that M phi-SF inhibits cell division by causing a block at or in mitosis and suggest that M phi-SF may be a general inhibitor of cellular proliferation and possibly of protein secretion.