Publication | Closed Access
Xenogenization of a mouse lung carcinoma (3LL) by transfection with an allogeneic class I major histocompatibility complex gene (H-2Ld).
58
Citations
26
References
1987
Year
HistocompatibilityGeneticsImmunologyImmunoeditingPathologyImmunotherapyCancer BiologyTumor BiologyTransplantation ResistanceTumor ImmunityCancer Cell BiologySingle CloneCancer ResearchOncogenic AgentLewis Lung CarcinomaCancer GeneticsCell BiologyAllogeneic ClassLung CancerMalignant DiseaseCancer ImmunosurveillanceMouse Lung CarcinomaMedicine
We investigated the tumorigenicity and immunogenicity of tumor cells transfected with an allogeneic class I major histocompatibility complex gene. A single clone (3LL/3) from a Lewis lung carcinoma in the C57BL/6 strain (H-2b) was cotransfected with a BALB/c genomic clone containing an H-2Ld gene and a bacterial neo gene conferring resistance to G418. Three Ld-positive, three Ld-negative, and two Neor clones were selected by means of a 125I-protein A binding assay using an anti-H-2Ld monoclonal antibody. The antigenic expression of the H-2Ld gene products was only 20-40% on the Ld-positive clones compared with Meth-A tumor cells of BALB/c mice. The 50% lethal tumor dose of these clones in C57BL/6 mice was 5.6 X 10(6) in the Ld-positive clones, but only 1.3 X 10(5) in the 3LL/3 parent clone, 1.2 X 10(5) in the Neor clones, and 2.2 X 10(5) in the Ld-negative clones. The tumorigenicity of the Ld-positive clones was, therefore, reduced to less than 1/40 of that of the parent tumor cells. The decreased tumorigenicity of the Ld-positive clones was abrogated in mice irradiated with 600 rads. After inoculation and spontaneous regression of the viable Ld-positive clone cells, the mice acquired transplantation resistance against the challenge of a parental 3LL/3 tumor. However, the immunogenicity variation between Ld-positive, Ld-negative, Neor, and 3LL/3 parent clones showed no statistical difference. These results indicate that tumor cells transfected with an allogeneic class I H-2 gene can express an H-2 foreign antigen, can regress in syngeneic hosts, and can induce antitumor transplantation resistance against the original tumors, although they are not able to enhance their immunogenicity.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1