Emergence of immunoglobulin variants following treatment of a B cell leukemia with an immunotoxin composed of antiidiotypic antibody and saporin.
Open Access
- 1 July 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 166 (1) , 43-62
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.166.1.43
Abstract
The potency and specificity of immunotoxins consisting of monoclonal antiidiotype conjugated to the ribosome-inactivating protein, saporin, have been evaluated in the treatment of guinea pig L2C B lymphocytic leukemia. The immunotoxins were therapeutically much more effective than their parent antibodies. Their specificity reflected that of their antiidiotype component. Although the leukemia emerged eventually in most animals treated with these conjugates, most of the cells showed altered Ig expression, which rendered them resistant to the therapy. Commonly, the emerging cells had lost mu heavy chain production, leaving them negative for intracellular, surface, and secreted IgM, but still positive for lambda light chain production. In addition, a minor group of L2C variants was identified in a protocol designed to detect mutants at very low frequency: here the cells were exposed in vitro to immunotoxin and, while still viable as judged by dye-exclusion, inoculated in large numbers into animals. In tumor that emerged under these circumstances, the majority of cells were again immunoglobulin-negative; however a minority exhibited IgM with an altered idiotype (Idiotope-loss variants), rendering them unreactive with immunotoxin. Immunotherapy with unmodified anti-Id antibody alone does not reveal these variants, and we suggest it is the increased selective force exerted by the highly potent immunotoxins that allow these minor nonreactive populations to emerge.This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
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