Abstract
Simian virus 40-transformed cells are characterized by a virus-induced tumor transplantation antigen (SV40 TSTA) defined in vivo by the rejection of tumorigenic SV40-transformed cells in SV40-immunized mice and in vitro by SV40 tumor cell-specific cytotoxic T cells. Several experimental findings support the notion that SV40-infected and -transformed cells express SV40 large tumor antigen (TAg) or closely related antigens on the cell surface (surface T). In this report, evidence is presented for a cell surface binding affinity of SV40 TAg solubilized and extracted by disruption of SV40-transformed and SV40-infected cells in growth medium. Incubation of various transformed and nontransformed living monolayer cells in situ with these extracts led to a significant uptake of TAg to the cell surface (called “externally bound TAg”) up to two to five times higher amounts in comparison to native surface T on SV40-transformed cells. This was demonstrated by the highly sensitive 125I-protein A assay using rabbit antisera directed against purified SV40 TAg. Serological analysis of TAg in cellular extracts and of externally bound TAg revealed no apparent differences suggesting the cell surface binding affinity as a new property of SV40 TAg. We interpret our results as an indication that this property enables purified TAg to initiate the cellular immune response necessary for the SV40-tumor rejection in mice.
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