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. 1978 Jul;61(1):189-201.
doi: 10.1093/jnci/61.1.189.

Effect of embryonic tissue immunization on chemically induced gastrointestinal tumors in rats. I. Can embryonic antigens act as rejection antigens?

Effect of embryonic tissue immunization on chemically induced gastrointestinal tumors in rats. I. Can embryonic antigens act as rejection antigens?

B R Bansal et al. J Natl Cancer Inst. 1978 Jul.

Abstract

Inbred WF rats were inoculated with crude suspensions prepared from liver and gut tissue of 12- to 15-day fetuses of the same strain. Rats previously unsensitized to syngeneic embryonic tissue were inoculated with fetal material sc three times during exposure to 1, 2-dimethylhydrazine dihydrochloride (DMH), a gastrointestinal (GI) carcinogen in rodents. Properly timed immunization inhibited the development, growth, and metastasis of primary GI tumors. This effects was observed in both sexes; however, it was more prounced in male rats. Nine WF rats with DMH-induced carcinoma of the GI tract were inoculated sc with syngeneic fetal tissue. Of 9 rats, 7 rejected the embryonal tissue implants, which thus demonstrated the presence of a concomitant immune response to embryonic antigen(s). Two rats in which fetal tissue grew out to palpable nodules had multiple GI tumors with metastasis and extra-GI tumors, i.e., a massive tumor load. Ten other rats with DMH-induced GI tumors were treated with unblocking serum. The unblocking serum was inoculated to counteract serum-blocking factors in vivo. These rats were inoculated intradermally with syngeneic fetal tissue. In all 10 rats, inflammation and necrosis were noted at the inoculation site after 24-72 hours, which thus demonstrated a delayed hypersensitivity reaction to embryonic antigens. Our experiments suggest that embryonic antigens common to fetal and tumor cells can induce immunity in an autochthonous host and can act as rejection antigens.

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