Abstract

Abstract Infection of adult C57BL/6 mice with variants of the radiation leukemia virus resulted in variable leukemia incidence. One variant, designated D-RadLV, induced lymphatic leukemia in 0 to 25% of mice after virus inoculation directly into the thymus of young adult mice. The leukemia incidence could be increased to 80 to 100% by host exposure to x-rays. The second variant, A-RadLV, induced lymphatic leukemia in 80 to 100% of similarly inoculated mice without the need for additional radiation treatment. Adult mice were inoculated with D-RadLV or A-RadLV. Both variants reduced the immune response to sheep erythrocytes whereas only D-RadLV had an immunosuppressive effect after immunization with a thymus-independent immunogen polyvinyl-pyrrolidone (PVP). Results of transfer experiments indicated that the immunosuppressive effects were expressed at the immunocompetent cell level. Thymusderived cells were affected by A-RadLV since their immunocompetent function was impaired, whereas D-RadLV affected the marrow cell population of immunocytes. Exposure of D-RadLV-inoculated mice to x-rays induced functional impairment of both thymus and marrow cells. Since the radiation leukemia virus induces “T” lymphatic leukemia it could be proposed that the initial tropism of the virus to thymocytes would lead to high leukemia induction potential, whereas virus tropism to bone marrow cells would yield a low leukemia incidence. The coleukemogenic effect of x-rays could perhaps be related with its capacity to alter and introduce a change in virus-lymphoid cells interaction.

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