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Chemically induced tumors of mice exhibit apparently unique antigenicity upon syngeneic transplantation into appropriately immunized hosts. An in vitro counterpart of this pattern in terms of specificity has not been reported. Data are presented that demonstrate that immune peritoneal exudates contain cells cytotoxic for the specific immunogen tumor but with rare exceptions, not toward other syngeneic methylcholanthrene-induced fibrosarcomas. Only tumors highly immunogenic by transplantation criteria induce cytotoxic PEC regularly; nonimmunogenic tumors consistently fail to do so. The effector cell responsible is eliminated by pretreatment with anti-Thy.1 but not anti-Ig plus complement. In concomitant experiments, PEC populations cytotoxic in vitro also conveyed adoptive protection against the specific tumor in syngeneic hosts. This in vitro assay appears to provide a tool for studying T cell-mediated cytotoxicity toward a set of unique surface antigens present on chemically induced tumors.
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Chauvenet et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a19ea0a60e90a7f5feace89 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.123.6.2575
Paula H. Chauvenet
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Carole McArthur
Truman Medical Center
Richard T. Smith
Laurentian University
The Journal of Immunology
University of Florida
Florida College
Jackson Laboratory
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