The Journal of Experimental Medicine
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The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol 136, 344-352, Copyright © 1972 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

LACK OF DISTINCTIVE SURFACE ANTIGEN ON CELLS TRANSFORMED BY MURINE SARCOMA VIRUS

Vladimir Strouk 1, Gertrud Grundner 1, Eva Maria Fenyö 1, Ed Lamon 1, Henryk Skurzak 1, and George Klein 1

1 From the Department of Tumor Biology, Karolinska Institutet, S 104 01 Stockholm 60, Sweden

Some murine sarcoma virus (MSV)-transformed mouse 3T3 cells contain the MSV genome in the absence of infectious helper murine leukemia virus (MuLV) and MSV production.

These cells, designated S+L- (sarcoma positive, leukemia negative), were analyzed for the presence of a possible MSV-determined membrane antigen by the mixed hemadsorption test and in vitro lymphocyte cytotoxicity assay. Two different serological approaches were used: (a) isoantibody-free sera were obtained by immunizing with MSV of syngeneic origin or by allowing primary, autologous MSV sarcomas to regress, or (b) alloantisera obtained by immunizing C57BL mice with S+L- cells were absorbed with the corresponding nontransformed 3T3 cells until all activity against 3T3 had been removed.

While MuLV-superinfected S+L- cells and a culture line of an MSV sarcoma known to produce both MSV and MLV were highly reactive, normal 3T3 and S+L- cells were negative. Similarly, lymph node cells from MSV immune mice or rats did not kill S+L- cells, although they were cytotoxic against target cells known to carry MuLV-associated antigens. Thus, the present study gives no positive evidence for the existence of any MSV-induced new surface antigen in the transformed target cell, known to carry the viral genome.

Submitted on April 23, 1972


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