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Multiple splenic lymphoid cell subpopulations regulate H-2 antigen expression on teratocarcinoma cells in vivo
Authors:S Ostrand-Rosenberg  A L Cohn  J W Sandoz
Abstract:Undifferentiated murine 402AX teratocarcinoma cells do not express MHC antigens when passaged in vitro or in vivo in genetically susceptible host mice. When passaged in vivo in genetically resistant mice, however, the tumor cells become H-2b antigen positive regardless of the H-2 haplotype of the resistant host mouse. The present studies use monoclonal anti-H-2b antibodies to corroborate these earlier findings, which were performed with conventional antisera. Previous studies have established that host bone marrow plus lymphoid cells from resistant primed donors regulate tumor cell H-2b antigen expression. Using bone marrow and mature lymphoid cell reconstitution techniques, the present studies indicate that splenic Ig- cells from genetically resistant host mice are the most efficient lymphoid cell subpopulation in tumor cell H-2b antigen induction. Ig+ spleen cells also reconstitute the capacity to induce teratocarcinoma cell H-2 antigens but are less effective than Ig- spleen cells. Tumor cell H-2 antigen induction in C57BL/6 beige mice is impaired compared to C57BL/6 hosts, which suggests that host NK cells may also be involved in tumor cell H-2 antigen induction. Reconstitution of lethally irradiated resistant hosts for teratocarcinoma cell H-2 antigen expression requires bone marrow plus resistant primed lymphoid cell subpopulations; bone marrow alone is insufficient. These results indicate that multiple splenic lymphoid cell subpopulations requiring a radiosensitive host environment and/or factor for differentiation regulate teratocarcinoma 402AX H-2b antigen expression in vivo in genetically resistant mice.
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