| Literature DB >> 1092874 |
M S Meltzer, R W Tucker, K K Sanford, E J Leonard.
Abstract
Peritoneal cells from mice infected ip with Mycobacterium bovis, strain BCG, were cytotoxic to syngeneic tumor cells in vitro. Cytotoxicity was estimated by measurement of release of tritiated-thymidine (3-H-TDR) from prelabeled target cells. The cell responsible for tumor cytotoxicity was the macrophage. Macrophages from uninfected mice or from oil-, starch-, or thioglycollate-induced peritoneal exudates had little effect on labeled tumor monolayers. Tumoricidal macrophages were present at 3-7 days and persisted through 6 weeks after a single BCG injection. Two neoplastic/nonneoplastic cell-line pairs, all four of the cell lines derived from a cloned syngeneic embryo cell line, were used as target cells for BCG-activated macrophages. Both tumor cell lines released significantly more 3-H-TDR than did the two nonneoplastic lines. In a mixed neoplastic/nonneoplastic target cell population, BCG-activated macrophages selectively destroyed the neoplastic cells; nonneoplastic cells were not affected as "innocent bystanders".Entities:
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Year: 1975 PMID: 1092874 DOI: 10.1093/jnci/54.5.1177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst ISSN: 0027-8874 Impact factor: 13.506