| Literature DB >> 361429 |
Abstract
Thymectomized, lethally irradiated mice reconstituted with bone marrow cells (TIR mice) from normal donors succumbed after i.p. challenge with xenogeneic (rat) Yoshida ascites sarcoma (YAS) given 1 month after irradiation and reconstitution. YAS rejection and production of YAS-antibodies was induced in TIR mice by a single i.v. injection of normal syngeneic spleen cells given 1 day after the tumor. Purified splenic T lymphocytes also induced YAS rejection in TIR mice, but splenic B lymphocytes did not affect progressive tumor growth. Tumor was also rejected in TIR mice that had been reconstituted with bone marrow cells from YAS-immune donors. The sera of these TIR mice did not contain tumor antibodies between reconstitution and YAS challenge, but a high YAS-antibody titer was present after YAS challenge and rejection. Immunofluorescence did not reveal any dramatic differences in the spleen and bone marrow content of T and B lymphocytes of TIR mice reconstituted with cells from normal donors and those reconstituted with cells from the YAS-immunized donors. Transfer of YAS-resistance was abolished when the bone marrow cells from immunized donors were treated with Thy 1.2 antiserum and complement, or when bone marrow donors were injected with cyclophosphamide 1 day after immunization. Cyclophosphamide was also shown to induce strong and specific suppression of YAS-antibody production in normal mice.Entities:
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Year: 1978 PMID: 361429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Hematol ISSN: 0301-472X Impact factor: 3.084