Publication | Open Access
Rejection of B16 melanoma induced by expression of a transfected major histocompatibility complex class I gene.
62
Citations
27
References
1988
Year
HistocompatibilityCancer ImmunosurveillanceTransfected ClassMedicineCell Surface ClassMelanomaImmunologyTumor ImmunityImmune Checkpoint InhibitorTumorigenic ActivityCell TransplantationImmunotherapyB16 MelanomaCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentTumor BiologySkin Cancer
Transfection of a functional major histocompatibility complex class I gene into certain tumor cells, induced by oncogenic viruses or chemical carcinogens, can effectively abrogate their tumorigenic activity. Since experimentally induced tumors possess strong tumor-specific transplantation antigens, expression of cell surface class I antigens may present the tumor cells to appropriate immune effector cells. Most spontaneously arising tumors do not possess tumor-specific transplantation antigens, and their tumorigenicity may not be affected by the expression of a transfected class I gene. We demonstrate that the poorly immunogenic B16-BL6 melanoma can be rendered nontumorigenic in syngeneic mice by the expression of the class I H-2K antigen but not the class II I-A antigen. Furthermore, the poorly tumorigenic, class I-expressing B16-BL6-transfected cells can effectively immunize syngeneic C57BL/6 mice against the highly tumorigenic, class I-deficient B16-BL6 parental cells. Our success in experimentally manipulating the tumorigenicity of a spontaneously derived neoplasm offers hope for a potential modality for the effective treatment of human cancer.
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