Abstract
C3H/Bi mice developed autoantibodies after repeated inoculations of isolated membranes from primary tissue cultures of a syngeneic ascites lymphoma in which Newcastle disease virus had grown. This was in addition to the tumor transplantation resistance and cytotoxic antibodies previously demonstrated. The complement-fixing antibodies were completely removed from sera by adsorption with ascites tumor cells but only partially by normal mouse liver powder or C3H/Bi erythrocytes. With continued immunization, antibodies to deoxynucleoprotein and heterophile reagins also appeared. After several months, mice showing these serological reactions died with a wasting disease characterized by loss of lymphoid tissue and scarred, atrophied kidneys. No significant antibody response or autoimmune disease occurred in mice receiving membranes from uninfected syngeneic ascites lymphoma.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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