Cell-mediated reactivity to antigens shared by moloney-virus-induced lymphomas (LSTRA) and certain 3-methylcholanthrene-induced mouse sarcomas

Abstract
Spleen cells (SC) both from BALB/c mice whose primary Moloney sarcoma virus (MSV)‐induced sarcomas had spontaneously regressed and from normal, untreated BALB/c mice, were co‐cultivated for 5 days with mitomycin‐C‐treated LSTRA cells; LSTRA is a BALB/c Moloney lymphoma which shares cell surface antigens with MSV‐induced sarcomas. These SC, referred to as CMR and CU cells, respectively, were shown to be cytotoxic to LSTRA cells in 3 h 51Cr‐release assays; CMR cells showed, in most cases, the greatest lytic activity against LSTRA targets. The same SC were also reactive, in 20‐h microcytotoxicity and 51Cr‐assays, against target cells from a variety of transplanted sarcomas induced by 3‐methylcholanthrene (MCA) in BALB/c mice. The highest reactivity was seen when CMR or CU cells were tested against target cells from sarcoma lines that expressed an NB‐ecotropic MuLV cross‐reacting serologically with Moloney virus. Reactivity against isotope‐labelled tumor cells expressing MuLV‐associated cell surface antigens could be competitively inhibited by adding unlabelled tumor cells expressing such antigens. Finally, Winn assays were performed in which CMR cells strongly inhibited the outgrowth of cells from three sarcoma lines that express the NB‐ecotropic MuLV. There was less but significant inhibition of cells from some other MCA sarcomas, either negative for the expression of MuLV‐associated antigens or expressing the N‐ecotropic endogenous BALB/c MuLV. CU cells enhanced tumor outgrowth in Winn assays at least as often as they inhibited it.

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