Sigel M M, Lopez D M, Ortiz-Muniz G
Cancer Res. 1976 Feb;36(2 pt 2):748-52.
Inhibition of migration of peritoneal exudate cells proved to be a useful measurement of cell-mediated immunity which correlated in several respects with blastogenic transformation reactions. Lectins (phytohemagglutinin and concanavalin A) inhibited the migration of peritoneal exudate cells from normal and tumor-bearing mice, whereas tumor antigen caused inhibition of migration of cells from tumor-bearing animals only. The disparity in immunogenic capacity previously observed with lymphocyte transformation studies was also manifested in migration inhibition, i.e., D1-DMBA-3 tumor being immunogenic and D1-DMBA-2 being nonimmunogenic. Using the migration inhibition and blastogenic transformation reactions, responses were obtained to mammary tumor virus (MTV) antigen(s) in cells from BALB/cCrgl mice, which are free of MTV. In contrast, cells from MTV-positive BALB/cfC3H mice failed to respond to this antigen(s) in both reactions, suggesting a form of tolerance. However, the reactions became positive after implantation with MTV-containing spontaneous mammary tumors. Two possible explanations of the origin of reactive lymphocytes, horizontal transmission, or activation of a gene coding for an MTV antigen(s), are discussed.