Abstract
Four human hybridoma cell lines (PEB1-4) were established from a fusion of pleural effusion lymphocytes isolated from a breast cancer patient with metastatic disease, 6 years postmastectomy. The hybridomas secreted IgG-k (3 micrograms/ml/10(6) cells). These monoclonal antibodies (PEB1-4) reacted to different degrees with mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) and T47D particles (HuMTV). Immunological cross-reaction was also detected with antigens isolated from body fluids of breast cancer patients (BF-Ag). The binding capacity of the monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) PEB1-4 to the above-mentioned antigens was measured by RIA. The specificity of these antibodies was further demonstrated by radioimmunoprecipitation of MMTV, T47D (HuMTV) and BF-Ag. The binding of PEB1-4 to surface antigens of intact cells grown in culture was measured by RIA. Some of the MAbs were shown to bind more avidly to breast cancer cells than to nonbreast cancer cells or nonmalignant cells. The PEB1-4 human monoclonal antibodies may be found useful in analyzing the virus-breast cancer relationship.
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