Publication | Closed Access
Induction in a murine tumor of immunogenic tumor variants by transfection with a foreign gene.
111
Citations
22
References
1988
Year
ImmunologyPathologyImmunodominanceImmunologic MechanismAntigen ProcessingImmune RecognitionImmunotherapyTumor BiologyMurine TumorForeign GeneTumor ImmunologyTumor HeterogeneityTumor ImmunitySurface Ha ExpressionTherapeutic VaccineT Cell ImmunityInfluenza VirusVaccinationCancer ImmunosurveillanceMedicineImmunogenic Tumor Variants
Transfection of the undifferentiated murine colon carcinoma line CT-26 with the gene coding for the hemagglutination antigen (HA) of influenza virus resulted in the generation of highly immunogenic tumor cells. CT-26 cells transfected with HA not only failed to grow in syngeneic mice but also protected normal animals against a challenge with otherwise lethal doses of parental nontransfected cells. The immunogenicity of HA-transfected cells appeared to correlate with surface HA expression in that tumorigenic clones of HA-transfected CT-26 cells expressed little HA, while immunogenic clones were high expressers of HA. Irradiation of immunogenic HA clones did not abrogate their immunogenicity. These observations demonstrate that immune recognition of a poorly immunogenic tumor can be produced by immunization with tumor cells expressing a defined, foreign cell surface antigen.
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