Abstract

Syngeneic spleen cells from normal, non-immune Fischer 344/N rats and allogeneic spleen cells from normal Wistar-Furth rats became cytotoxic, in vitro, to chemically induced Fischer rat sarcoma (MC3-R) target cells following incubation with xenogeneic Immune RNA (I-RNA) extracted from spleens of guinea pigs immunized with MC3-R tumor cells. I-RNA extracted from intact spleen cells or from the cytoplasmic fraction of spleen cells were equally active. RNA extracted from isolated spleen cell nuclei was inactive, as were all RNA fractions from spleen cells of nonspecifically immunized guinea pigs. Syngeneic I-RNA extracted from intact spleen cells or the cytoplasmic fraction of cells from spleens of Fischer rats bearing growing MC3-R transplants mediated cytotoxic reactions against MC3-R target cells when incubated with normal Fischer rat spleen cells. RNA from the nuclei of spleen cells of rats bearing MC3-R tumors was considerably less active. All RNA fractions from spleen cells of normal non-immune Fischer rats were inactive. The immunologically active component of xenogeneic and Syngeneic I-RNA, therefore, were found to be localized in the cytoplasm of specifically sensitized lymphoid cells.

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