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Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age

The ultraviolet light-induced fibrosarcoma 1591 undergoes "first-set rejection" when transplanted into normal syngeneic mice. We found, however, that the primary resistance of normal mice decreases with age, beginning at 9--12 mo, equivalent to middle age for mice. Mice lose with age the c...

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1981
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2186407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6973599
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description The ultraviolet light-induced fibrosarcoma 1591 undergoes "first-set rejection" when transplanted into normal syngeneic mice. We found, however, that the primary resistance of normal mice decreases with age, beginning at 9--12 mo, equivalent to middle age for mice. Mice lose with age the capacity to mount both idiotypic and anti-idiotypic responses responsible for controlling the growth of tumor. This loss was correlated with quantitative as well as qualitative changes in the response, such as changes in specificity and clonotype. Normal young mice regularly expressed a dominant common anti-1591 "idiotype" as defined by an anti-idiotypic probe. The capability of normal mice to respond with lymphocytes of this dominant common idiotype began to decline at about 8 mo of age. At this time, animals still generated tumor-specific lymphocytes, but these lymphocytes appear to be idiotypically different lymphocyte clones. With further increase in age, animals responded with tumor-reactive lymphocytes that showed a marked cross-reactivity to other tumor target cell lines. Both in vivo and in vitro, the capability of normal mice to mount an immune response that was specific for the 1591 tumor cells decreased between 9 and 14 mo, which was the age individual mice became increasingly susceptible to a challenge with 1591 tumor cells. Thus, our data suggest that clones of tumor-specific T cells provide primary and early protection of young animals against challenge with malignant 1591 cells. However, the dominance of these tumor-specific T cell clones in a primary immune response is lost in middle-age. Because the ability of animals to mount anti-idiotypic immune response also declined in middle-aged animals, it is possible that the observed loss of clonal dominance of tumor- specific clones with increasing age is at least partially related to age-dependent changes in the anti-idiotypic compartment.
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spelling pubmed-21864072008-04-17 Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age J Exp Med Articles The ultraviolet light-induced fibrosarcoma 1591 undergoes "first-set rejection" when transplanted into normal syngeneic mice. We found, however, that the primary resistance of normal mice decreases with age, beginning at 9--12 mo, equivalent to middle age for mice. Mice lose with age the capacity to mount both idiotypic and anti-idiotypic responses responsible for controlling the growth of tumor. This loss was correlated with quantitative as well as qualitative changes in the response, such as changes in specificity and clonotype. Normal young mice regularly expressed a dominant common anti-1591 "idiotype" as defined by an anti-idiotypic probe. The capability of normal mice to respond with lymphocytes of this dominant common idiotype began to decline at about 8 mo of age. At this time, animals still generated tumor-specific lymphocytes, but these lymphocytes appear to be idiotypically different lymphocyte clones. With further increase in age, animals responded with tumor-reactive lymphocytes that showed a marked cross-reactivity to other tumor target cell lines. Both in vivo and in vitro, the capability of normal mice to mount an immune response that was specific for the 1591 tumor cells decreased between 9 and 14 mo, which was the age individual mice became increasingly susceptible to a challenge with 1591 tumor cells. Thus, our data suggest that clones of tumor-specific T cells provide primary and early protection of young animals against challenge with malignant 1591 cells. However, the dominance of these tumor-specific T cell clones in a primary immune response is lost in middle-age. Because the ability of animals to mount anti-idiotypic immune response also declined in middle-aged animals, it is possible that the observed loss of clonal dominance of tumor- specific clones with increasing age is at least partially related to age-dependent changes in the anti-idiotypic compartment. The Rockefeller University Press 1981-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2186407/ /pubmed/6973599 Text en 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 Articles
Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age
title Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age
title_full Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age
title_fullStr Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age
title_full_unstemmed Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age
title_short Loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age
title_sort loss of tumor-specific and idiotype-specific immunity with age
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2186407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6973599