Suppression of hamster lymphocyte reactivity to simian virus 40 tumor surface antigens by spleen cells from pregnant hamsters

William A. Weppner, Linda R. Adkison, Joseph H. Cogoin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

SV40-transformed tumor cells in hamsters have been found to have cell surface antigens cross-reactive with antigens temporally expressed on fetal tissues. Adoptive transfer assays performed in this laboratory have shown that peritoneal exudate cells from 10-day primiparous hamsters are cytotoxic to SV40-transformed sarcoma cells (WF5-1) carrying fetal antigen, whereas peritoneal exudate cells from multiparous hamsters are less cytotoxic. This suggests a suppressor activity might be present during subsequent pregnancies that reduces the responsiveness of lymphocytes from pregnant hamsters to stimulation by fetal antigens on tumor cells. Using a lymphocyte transformation assay, spleen cells from pregnant hamsters were found to be incapable of responding to preparations of either hamster fetal tissue or SV40-transformed cells. However, a suppressor component can be demonstrated in spleen cell populations of both primi- and multiparous hamsters during pregnancy that is capable of reducing the response of lymphocytes sensitized against SV40 tumor-associated antigens. The degree of suppression is proportional to the ratio of responder cells to spleen cells from pregnant animals. These results suggest there is a subpopulation of spleen cells involved in immunoregulation during pregnancy that has the ability to suppress the reactivity of lymphocytes sensitized against SV40-associated oncofetal antigens. © 1980, All rights reserved.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)445-454
Number of pages10
JournalCellular Immunology
Volume54
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1980
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Immunology

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