LOSS OF ONCOGENICITY AND CONCOMITANT INCREASED IMMUNOGENICITY OF MURINE PLASMACYTOMA CELL LINES
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 90 (3) , 565-+
Abstract
Murine plasmacytoma cells gradually decrease in oncogenicity with prolonged culture in vitro. Newly established cultures are oncogenic and cause lethal tumors. The cultures are oncogenic but some of the tumors regress. Later in the life of the culture none of the tumors are lethal. The longer the cells are in culture, the less oncogenic they become; eventually the cultures are nononcogenic in normal mice but do cause tumors in irradiated mice. Clones from the cultures vary from being very oncogenic to being nononcogenic. The nononocogenic cells may have a selective growth advantage and become the dominant cell type in the cultures. Nononcogenic cultures are more effective for immunization to subsequent challenge with the original tumor than are the tumor cells or oncogenic cultures and may confer complete protection against lethal tumor challenge in adoptive transfer experiments. Mixtures of nononcogenic and oncogenic cells decrease the tumor-forming ability of the latter when they are injected together in 1 site or injected separately in 2 sites.This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immunotherapy of Cancer with AntibodyScience, 1976
- The induction of immunoprotection by mouse ascites tumor cells attenuated in tissue culturePublished by Elsevier ,1972
- Cloning of mouse myeloma cells and detection of rare variantsJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1972
- Growth characteristics of long-term cultures of mouse myeloma cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1972
- Decrease in tumor‐producing capacity of mouse cell lines following infection with mouse leukemia virusesInternational Journal of Cancer, 1971
- The formation of variants with a reversion of properties of transformed cellsVirology, 1970
- Induction d'une immunité vis-à-vis de la greffe de plasmocytosarcomes chez la souris BALB/cEuropean Journal of Cancer (1965), 1969
- Colonial Growth in Agar ofcells Derived from Neoplastic and Non-Neoplastic Tissues of ChildrenPediatric Research, 1968
- Comparative studies of a near-tetraploid and a near-diploid line of Ehrlich's ascites tumor propagated in vivo and in vitro II. Cytology and transplantabilityEuropean Journal of Cancer (1965), 1968
- In Vitro Cell Transformation by X-IrradiationNature, 1966