SV40 tumor rejection induced by vesicular stomatitis virus bearing SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (SV40-TSTA). I. Specificity of immunoprotection and effect of enzyme treatment on TSTA activity
- PMID: 71274
- DOI: 10.1002/ijc.2910200110
SV40 tumor rejection induced by vesicular stomatitis virus bearing SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (SV40-TSTA). I. Specificity of immunoprotection and effect of enzyme treatment on TSTA activity
Abstract
Highly purified vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) was obtained from VSV-infected SV40-transformed hamster cell lines. Immunization with this virus protected hamsters against challenge with SV40-transformed cells (TSV5-cl2). This protection was obtained regardless of the source of the SV40-transformed cells (e.g. cat, rat, hamster) used to produce VSV, and was therefore associated with the SV40 tumor-specific transplantation antigen (SV40-TSTA). Furthermore, when grown on spontaneously transformed cell lines or on cells transformed by a different oncogenic DNA virus, such as polyoma virus, the VSV failed to protect against the SV40-induced tumor. It was concluded that the SV40-TSTA activity of purified VSV is due to the incorporation of SV40-TSTA within the viral envelope. When VSV was treated with proteolytic enzymes (bromelain, trypsin) no loss of TSTA-induced tumor rejection was observed, although VSV had lost its ability to induce virus-neutralizing antibody. This clearly demonstrates that the TSTA activity is not related to the viral spikes. Phospholipase C suppressed the TSTA activity but neutralizing activity was still detectable in the anti-VSV sera. The results presented here demonstrate that the protection afforded by VSV is highly specific. It is particularly interesting that SV40-TSTA activity may be conveyed by the lipid core of the viral envelope.
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