Mekler L B, Artamonova S I, Bodyagin D A, Drize O B, Mkheidze D M, Osechinskii I V, Solenov V N
Sov J Dev Biol. 1975 May;5(3):201-19.
The results of experiments carried out to test some of the consequences of the earlier general theory of oncogenesis, according to which the malignant tumor cell can arise as a result of somatic hybridization of cells of different organ- and tissue-specificity, are described. In the first series a tumor induced by cellophane film, was grafted into syngeneic and allogeneic mice, and antilymphocytic serum (ALS) was then injected. Metastases occurred only in allogeneic recipients receiving ALS. It was thus shown that the ability of cells of this particular tumor to metastasize is not a property inherent in its cells but is acquired by them as a result of interaction with the recipient organism. In the second series it was shown by two immunological methods that the cells of metastases arising under these conditions contain tissue compatibility antigens of donor and recipient origin, i. e., that they are somatic hybridsmin the third series skin from individuals of another strain was grafted on to mice and ALS was injected; hepatomas developed in 74% of these mice. The theory is used to explain several phenomena of carcinogenesis not explicable by other theories: the phenotypic nature of cell transformation, the causes and nature of the duration of the latent period of tumor development, the mechanism responsible for the ability of tumors to overcome the system of immunological defense, the mechanism of activation of endogeneous oncogenic viruses, etc. Finally an answer is given to the question: what is a tumor?
本文描述了为检验早期肿瘤发生一般理论的某些推论而进行的实验结果。根据该理论,恶性肿瘤细胞可能是不同器官和组织特异性细胞进行体细胞杂交的结果。在第一组实验中,将玻璃纸薄膜诱导产生的肿瘤移植到同基因和异基因小鼠体内,然后注射抗淋巴细胞血清(ALS)。转移仅发生在接受ALS的异基因受体中。由此表明,这种特定肿瘤细胞的转移能力并非其细胞固有特性,而是它们与受体生物体相互作用的结果。在第二组实验中,通过两种免疫学方法表明,在这些条件下产生的转移瘤细胞含有供体和受体来源的组织相容性抗原,即它们是体细胞杂种。在第三组实验中,将另一品系个体的皮肤移植到小鼠身上并注射ALS;74%的小鼠发生了肝癌。该理论用于解释其他理论无法解释的几种致癌现象:细胞转化的表型性质、肿瘤发生潜伏期持续时间的原因和性质、肿瘤克服免疫防御系统能力的机制、内源性致癌病毒的激活机制等。最后回答了一个问题:肿瘤是什么?