Immunoselection of tumor cell variants by mice suppressed with ultraviolet radiation.
Open Access
- 1 October 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 156 (4), 1025-1041
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.156.4.1025
Abstract
It has previously been shown that mice exposed to ultraviolet radiation (UV) fail to reject highly immunogenic UV-induced tumors, which are regularly rejected by normal mice. The present study shows, however, that this immunosuppresion is incomplete, as UV-treated mice can still mount certain tumor-specific immune responses and reject smaller inocula of tumor cells that regularly grow progressively in athymic nude mice. Furthermore, all tumor cell lines that were reisolated from the tumor mass resulting from one tumor passage through UV-treated recipients heritably lost a tumor-specific determinant present on the parental tumor cells used for transplantation, and a large percentage of these reisolated variant tumors had changed to progressively growing tumors, in that they were no longer rejected by normal mice. In contrast, none of the tumors reisolated from passage through athymic nude mice or anti-idiotypically suppressed mice showed this change in antigenicity and progressive growth behavior. Thus, it appears that the phenotypic change in tumors reisolated from UV-treated mice was caused by immunoselection, and that the tumor-specific immunity in these mice apparently restrained the outgrowth of the parental tumor cells despite the partial immunosuppression. Because of the regularity at which tumor variants arose in the UV-treated mice after tumor transplantation, it appears that the partial immunosuppression caused by UV-treatment may have favored the outgrowth of antigenic variants from the parental tumor cell population, possibly by allowing more time for the generation of tumor variants. A similar immunoselection process might be part of tumor progression during tumor development and preferentially occur in cancer-bearing individuals showing concomitant tumor immunity.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ultraviolet light induced murine suppressor lymphocytes dictate specificity of anti-ultraviolet tumor immune responsesCellular Immunology, 1978
- Cytotoxicity Inhibition Assay: Cryopreservation and Standardization: Brief CommunicationJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1977
- Evidence for the generation of suppressor cells by ultraviolet radiationCellular Immunology, 1977
- Systemic alteration induced in mice by ultraviolet light irradiation and its relationship to ultraviolet carcinogenesis.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1977
- STUDIES INTO THE TRANSPLANTATION BIOLOGY OF ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT-INDUCED TUMORSTransplantation, 1977
- LATENCY, HISTOLOGY, AND ANTIGENICITY OF TUMORS INDUCED BY UV LIGHT IN 3 INBRED MOUSE STRAINS1977
- Immunologic Parameters of Ultraviolet Carcinogenesis 2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1976
- A BIOLOGICAL ROLE FOR THE MAJOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY ANTIGENSThe Lancet, 1975
- Antigenicity of Murine Skin Tumors Induced by Ultraviolet Light2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1974
- INDUCTION OF PARTIAL IMMUNOLOGIC TOLERANCE IN RATS AND PROGRESSIVE LOSS OF CELLULAR ANTIGENICITY IN GROSS VIRUS LYMPHOMAThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1974