Cultures of primary fibroblasts of C57BL/6J mice were used as targets for transformation by bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV 1) DNA. Although no foci were observed, several lines of transformed cells were established by subculturing. These immortalized cell lines had in vitro growth characteristics in high and low serum media and saturation densities typical of transformed cells. Karyotype analyses revealed extensive aneuploidic changes. In two of the three cell lines analyzed, viral DNA was present in monomeric episomal form, in the third cell line all viral sequences were found in the high molecular weight region of a Southern blot. Despite the transformed phenotype, only one of the cell lines was tumorigenic in nude mice at a low level.
Tumorigenicity in immunocompetent syngeneic mice and H-2 class I antigen expression of BPV1-transformed mouse cell lines had no correlation. H-2 expression was examined using monoclonal anti-(H-2Kb) and anti-(H-2Db) antibodies in immunofluorescence staining for flow cytometry analysis and by determining the sensitivity of the cells to cytolysis by allostimulated spleen cells. Nontumorigenic cell lines were as resistant as tumorigenic cell lines to natural killer activity. The results indicate that in our model defence by natural killer cells is not a decisive factor. The results also show that instead of or in addition to H-2 class I antigens other factors (e.g. the presence or absence of virus-specific antigens) are important in determining the tumorigenicity of BPV1-transformed cell lines.
Syngeneic or allogeneic cells transformed by BK virus (BKV) were used to immunize C57BL/6J mice. After in vitro stimulation, lymphocytes prepared from the spleens of immunized mice were used in in vitro cytotoxicity tests. The results of these tests revealed the presence of a cell surface antigen, presumably corresponding to the viral transplantation antigen, common to all tested BKV- and SV40-transformed cell lines of C57BL/6J origin. An allogeneic cell line transformed by BKV also contained the same antigen. Immunization, i.e., in vivo priming, did not require syngeneic transformed cells, whereas cytolysis was only observed when the virus-specific antigen on target cells was associated with the same H2 haplotype as was expressed by effector cells. An additional unidentified antigen was shared by some of the BKV-transformed cell lines and cell lines transformed by simian adenovirus SA7.
The immunogenicity and immunosensitivity of primary mouse cell lines transformed by bovine papilloma virus 1 (BPV1) DNA were studied in a syngeneic mouse model by determining cell-mediated cytotoxicity in the spleens of mice immunized with the transformed cells. One of the cell lines induced the generation of cell-line-specific Thy1.2-positive cytotoxic effector cells. However, most of the cell lines tested induced the generation of Thy1.2-positive effector cells, which in addition to BPV1-transformed cells were able to lyse a syngeneic cell line transformed by methylcholanthrene. The lysis of BPV1- and methylcholanthrene-transformed cell lines was mediated by recognition of the same antigenic determinants expressed on these cells, and all the BPV1-transformed cell lines were sensitive to lysis by these nonspecific effector cells of the lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) type.
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