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Carol L. Reinisch, Stuart F. Schlossman, Potentiation of Cytotoxic T-Cell Function by Virus, JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Volume 57, Issue 6, December 1976, Pages 1277–1281, https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/57.6.1277
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Abstract
Inoculation of C57BL/6J mice with allogeneic P815 mastocytoma cells in the presence of simian virus 40 (SV40), a DNA tumor virus, led to an enhanced cytolytic T-cell response to P815 in vivo. Cytotoxic function was also augmented if SV40 was given subsequent to a primary immunization, even when mice were given a suboptimal dose of immunizing cells. Although SV40 increased the cell-mediated immune response to allogeneic cells, it did not enhance the antibody response to the soluble antigen dinitrophenyl bovine y-globulin, a helper T-cell-dependent response. Thus it appeared that SV40 had a selective adjuvant effect on lymphocyte subpopulations, since it increased cytotoxicity but not helper T-cell function.
- immunologic adjuvants
- pharmaceutical adjuvants
- antibody formation
- antigens
- cattle
- dna tumor viruses
- globulins
- immunization
- lymphocyte subset
- mice, inbred c57bl
- simian virus 40
- t-lymphocytes
- t-lymphocytes, cytotoxic
- helper-inducer t-lymphocytes
- vaccination
- mice
- viruses
- immune response, cell-mediated
- cytotoxicity
- potentiation