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Morton D. Prager, C. M. Ludden, William J. Mandy, James P. Allison, G. Barrie Kitto, Brief Communication: Endotoxin-Stimulated Immune Response to Modified Lymphoma Cells, JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Volume 54, Issue 3, March 1975, Pages 773–775, https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/54.3.773
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Summary
Bacterial endotoxin was administered with iodoacetamide-modified P1798 lymphoma cells to immunize syngenic BALB/cJ mice against this lymphoma to which they are naturally unresponsive. Three or four vaccinations with endotoxin (6.6 µg/injection)alone or the modified cells alone did not produce host resistance. A significant number (30%) of mice receiving both endotoxin and modified cells rejected a subsequent implant of viable tumor cells. Even those mice having progressive tumor growth exhibited prolonged survival. High doses of endotoxin given with the modified P1798 cells caused 70–75% of the mice to reject the tumor implants. When resistance developed, antibodies reacting with tumor cell membrane were demonstrable. These results indicate that B-Iymphocyte stimulators can produce an effective immune response against lymphoma cells.