Abstract

The present study examines clonal variations in NK sensitivity in a methylcholanthrene-induced fibrosarcoma. Previous studies of clones from this tumor have shown considerable heterogeneity in H-2 expression, and an association between deleted or low levels of class-I products and increased tumorigenicity after subcutaneous implantation in immunocompetent syngeneic mice. Here, fibrosarcoma clones with no or low expression of MHC-class-I products were found to be sensitive to NK-mediated lysis, while clones with high levels of MHC-class-I expression were relatively resistant. One H-2+ (G2) and one H-2- (B9) clone were chosen for more detailed studies. Cold-target competition assays and conjugate cytotoxicity assays in agarose showed that splenic effector cells bound equally well to the H-2+ and H-2- tumor clone, although only the latter was sensitive to NK cell lysis. Treatment with 50 U/ml of rIFN-gamma for 48 hr increased the levels of H-2 expression and made both clones more resistant to NK-mediated lysis. In vivo studies with radiolabelled tumor cells showed that cells from the H-2+ clone survived better than cells from the H-2- clone in the pulmonary capillary bed after i.v. inoculation. This difference disappeared in mice treated with anti-asialo GM1 serum, known to deplete NK cell activity.

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