All human T lymphoblast cell lines have been derived from subjects with leukemia secondary to thymic lymphoblastic lymphoma, a T cell malignancy, suggesting that such lines represent established cultures of neoplastic T cells. Based on this observation, we prepared rabbit antisera to T cell line HSB-2, removed reactivity for histocompatibility antigens and normal T cells by absorption with autocthonous B cell line CCRF-SB and normal thymocytes, and tested the absorbed antisera by complement-dependent cytotoxicity against a panel of normal and malignant cells. A representative antiserum reacted with all 4 T cell lines (mean cytotoxic index =56) and with tumor cells from 4 patients with T cell lymphoma (mean cytotoxic index = 50) but did not react with tumor cells from 6 patients with other types of leukemias (mean cytotoxic index = 2), with 3 B cell lines (mean cytotoxic index = 1), normal peripheral blood lymphocytes (mean cytotoxic index = 5), or normal thymocytes (mean cytotoxic index = 6). We conclude that appropriately absorbed antisera to human T cell lines detect T cell lymphoma tumor antigens.
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