STUDIES ON THE HETEROLOGOUS IMMUNOGENICITY OF A METHANOL-INSOLUBLE FRACTION OF ATTENUATED TUBERCLE BACILLI (BCG)
Open Access
- 1 December 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 124 (6) , 1039-1065
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.124.6.1039
Abstract
A methanol-insoluble residue (MER) of phenol-killed attenuated tubercle bacilli (BCG), which has been reported previously to be capable of evoking heightened resistance to infection with antigenically unrelated microorganisms, was found to affect as well the resistance of highly inbred mice against tumor isografts. In most instances, the MER evoked heightened resistance against the tumor implants, but heightened susceptibility was the effect induced against two of the tumors tested, and no effect was elicited against one neoplasm. It is suggested that the heightened susceptibility occasionally produced by pretreatment with MER may also be of immunological nature, i.e. immunological enhancement. Treatment with MER was more effective when administered some time before tumor challenge than when given simultaneously with, or after, tumor implantation. The protective effects manifested against some tumors were of a high order, a significant number of animals rejecting the neoplastic implants, and were displayed even when several months elapsed between treatment and challenge. Living BCG and intact phenol-killed bacilli also evoked heightened resistance against some of the tumors tested, and in one experiment living BCG proved effective whereas MER did not. On the whole, however, MER was the most active (and least toxic, as shown previously) of the several tubercle bacillus preparations tested. MER elicited heightened reactivity against first transplant generation tumors as well as against tumors maintained for considerable periods of time by repeated animal passage, and against spontaneously arising as well as against induced neoplasms. The experimental parameters necessary to demonstrate maximal effects varied somewhat from tumor to tumor. In general, however, single intraperitoneal injections of small quantities of MER, of the order of 0.25 to 1.0 mg, afforded the best protection.This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- IMMUNOLOGY OF SPONTANEOUS MAMMARY CARCINOMAS IN MICE .3. IMMUNOGENICITY OF C3H PRENEOPLASTIC HYPERPLASTIC ALVEOLAR NODULES IN C3HF HOSTS1966
- IMMUNOLOGY OF SPONTANEOUS MAMMARY CARCINOMAS IN MICE .2. RESISTANCE TO A RAPIDLY AND A SLOWLY DEVELOPING TUMOR1965
- ACQUISITION OF HEIGHTENED RESISTANCE + SUSCEPTIBILITY TO SPONTANEOUS MOUSE MAMMARY CARCINOMAS IN ORIGINAL HOST1964
- IMMUNITY TO SPONTANEOUS + METHYLCHOLANTHRENE-INDUCED TUMORS IN INBRED MICE1964
- The Immunological Basis For Non-infective Rous SarcomasCold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1962
- Protective Activity of Fractions of Tubercle Bacilli against Isologous Tumours in MiceNature, 1961
- FACTORIAL ANALYSIS OF THE REACTIVITY OF C57BL FEMALES AGAINST ISOLOGOUS MALE SKIN GRAFTSPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1961
- VACCINATION AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS WITH NONLIVING VACCINES .3. VACCINATION OF GUINEA PIGS WITH FRACTIONS OF PHENOL-KILLED TUBERCLE BACILLIPublished by Elsevier ,1960
- DEMONSTRATION OF RESISTANCE AGAINST METHYLCHOLANTHRENE-INDUCED SARCOMAS IN THE PRIMARY AUTOCHTHONOUS HOST1960
- Histocompatibility changes in tumorsJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1958