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“Unblocking” Serum Activity in vitro in the Polyoma System may Correlate with Antitumour Effects of Antiserum in vivo

Abstract

In a variety of tumour systems, individuals carrying progressively growing neoplasms have lymphoid cells with a specific cytotoxic effect on cultured tumour cells from the same individual1–4. Since the sera of tumour-bearing individuals have been shown to prevent tumour cell destruction by immune lymphocytes in vitro2,5–8 and since this serum blocking activity appears early in primary and transplant tumour development5,7, it has been suggested that the appearance of this serum blocking activity might be responsible for the progressive growth of tumours in individuals having cytotoxic lymphocytes. Counteraction of this blocking activity would thus be of primary importance in facilitating the function of an already existing or bolstered cell-mediated immunity. The serum blocking activity might be inhibited in various ways, by preventing the formation of blocking antibody or by interfering with its action (“unblocking”), as demonstrated in Moloney sarcoma regressor sera9. This type of serum also has a therapeutic effect on Moloney sarcomas in vivo10,11, which has been tentatively attributed to its unblocking activity8,9 or, possibly, to a complement-dependent cytotoxicity10. Tumour growth in the Moloney sarcoma system, however, might be due in part to continuous recruitment of neoplastic cells by virus-induced transformation, and so the therapeutic effect could be due to a virus-neutralizing serum activity9,10.

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BANSAL, S., SJÖGREN, H. “Unblocking” Serum Activity in vitro in the Polyoma System may Correlate with Antitumour Effects of Antiserum in vivo. Nature New Biology 233, 76–78 (1971). https://doi.org/10.1038/newbio233076a0

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