Cargando…

INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS

Antibodies were found in the blood of certain rabbits carrying one or another of four transplanted cancers (Brown-Pearce and V2 carcinomas; RSI and Kato sarcomas) which will fix complement in vitro in mixture with saline extracts of various normal and neoplastic rabbit tissues—including liver, kidne...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Friedewald, William F., Kidd, John G.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1945
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2135537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19871483
_version_ 1782142920176959488
author Friedewald, William F.
Kidd, John G.
author_facet Friedewald, William F.
Kidd, John G.
author_sort Friedewald, William F.
collection PubMed
description Antibodies were found in the blood of certain rabbits carrying one or another of four transplanted cancers (Brown-Pearce and V2 carcinomas; RSI and Kato sarcomas) which will fix complement in vitro in mixture with saline extracts of various normal and neoplastic rabbit tissues—including liver, kidney, spleen, and the four tumors mentioned—and chick embryo tissue as well. These antibodies, which have been called induced tissue antibodies, are similar to the natural antibodies previously described (2) in that they react with those constituents of the various tissue cells that prove readily sedimentable in the high speed centrifuge; they differ from the natural antibodies in being absent from the blood of normal rabbits and in withstanding 65° C. for 30 minutes. Certain quantitative differences suggest that the induced tissue antibodies have somewhat various affinities, depending in part upon the type of neoplasm carried by the host. They may perhaps be consequent on antigenic differences between the sedimentable constituents of the tumor cells and those of the new hosts; for they were not found in the blood of rabbits carrying papillomas and cancers composed of the animals' own cells, and not in that of rabbits in which multiple vaccinia or fibroma virus lesions had recently regressed. The characters of the sedimentable constituents of normal and neoplastic tissue cells, as revealed thus far by chemical, morphological, and serological studies, have recently been discussed (2,8). In this relation, it has seemed essential to recognize the induced antibodies here described, particularly since they may complicate serological studies aimed at disclosing distinctive sedimentable substances in tissue cells. In an associated paper experiments are reported which bear upon the relation between the induced tissue antibodies and an antibody that reacts specifically with a distinctive sedimentable constituent of Brown-Pearce carcinoma cells (7).
format Text
id pubmed-2135537
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1945
publisher The Rockefeller University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-21355372008-04-18 INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS Friedewald, William F. Kidd, John G. J Exp Med Article Antibodies were found in the blood of certain rabbits carrying one or another of four transplanted cancers (Brown-Pearce and V2 carcinomas; RSI and Kato sarcomas) which will fix complement in vitro in mixture with saline extracts of various normal and neoplastic rabbit tissues—including liver, kidney, spleen, and the four tumors mentioned—and chick embryo tissue as well. These antibodies, which have been called induced tissue antibodies, are similar to the natural antibodies previously described (2) in that they react with those constituents of the various tissue cells that prove readily sedimentable in the high speed centrifuge; they differ from the natural antibodies in being absent from the blood of normal rabbits and in withstanding 65° C. for 30 minutes. Certain quantitative differences suggest that the induced tissue antibodies have somewhat various affinities, depending in part upon the type of neoplasm carried by the host. They may perhaps be consequent on antigenic differences between the sedimentable constituents of the tumor cells and those of the new hosts; for they were not found in the blood of rabbits carrying papillomas and cancers composed of the animals' own cells, and not in that of rabbits in which multiple vaccinia or fibroma virus lesions had recently regressed. The characters of the sedimentable constituents of normal and neoplastic tissue cells, as revealed thus far by chemical, morphological, and serological studies, have recently been discussed (2,8). In this relation, it has seemed essential to recognize the induced antibodies here described, particularly since they may complicate serological studies aimed at disclosing distinctive sedimentable substances in tissue cells. In an associated paper experiments are reported which bear upon the relation between the induced tissue antibodies and an antibody that reacts specifically with a distinctive sedimentable constituent of Brown-Pearce carcinoma cells (7). The Rockefeller University Press 1945-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2135537/ /pubmed/19871483 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1945, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Friedewald, William F.
Kidd, John G.
INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS
title INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS
title_full INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS
title_fullStr INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS
title_full_unstemmed INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS
title_short INDUCED ANTIBODIES THAT REACT IN VITRO WITH SEDIMENTABLE CONSTITUENTS OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC TISSUE CELLS : PRESENCE OF THE ANTIBODIES IN THE BLOOD OF RABBITS CARRYING VARIOUS TRANSPLANTED CANCERS
title_sort induced antibodies that react in vitro with sedimentable constituents of normal and neoplastic tissue cells : presence of the antibodies in the blood of rabbits carrying various transplanted cancers
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2135537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19871483
work_keys_str_mv AT friedewaldwilliamf inducedantibodiesthatreactinvitrowithsedimentableconstituentsofnormalandneoplastictissuecellspresenceoftheantibodiesinthebloodofrabbitscarryingvarioustransplantedcancers
AT kiddjohng inducedantibodiesthatreactinvitrowithsedimentableconstituentsofnormalandneoplastictissuecellspresenceoftheantibodiesinthebloodofrabbitscarryingvarioustransplantedcancers