| Literature DB >> 2460250 |
Abstract
The recombinant retrovirus J2, which contains the v-raf/mil and v-myc oncogenes, was used to immortalize mouse splenic macrophages that had been cloned in soft agar. When added to freshly harvested colonies, J2 failed to yield cell lines but it immortalized up to 30% of the clones if they had been maintained for at least 4 months in medium containing colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1). All of the cell lines grew in agar in a CSF-1-independent manner, and they produced tumors in nude and syngeneic mice. The cell lines were judged to be macrophage based on morphological criteria and because they secreted lysozyme, were phagocytic for antibody-coated particles, and expressed both the Mac-1 antigen and the CSF-1 receptor. The cell lines could be divided into three groups based on their expression of Ia and their ability to present an antigen to a T-cell hybridoma. The majority of the lines did not constitutively express Ia or present antigen, but a lymphokine did induce Ia in all of the lines, with most of them also acquiring antigen-presenting activity. However, a small proportion of lymphokine-treated lines continued to lack antigen-presenting activity despite their ability to express Ia. The third and smallest group of cell lines constitutively expressed both Ia and antigen-presenting activity. These results show that the J2 recombinant retrovirus is a useful means of immortalizing functionally distinct populations of cloned splenic macrophages.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 2460250 DOI: 10.1016/0008-8749(88)90236-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Immunol ISSN: 0008-8749 Impact factor: 4.868