Abstract

Altered immunologic reactions were observed in breast cancer patients as compared to those in normal subjects. Lymphoproliferative responses to murine mammary tumor virus (MuMTV) were significantly enhanced in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with metastatic disease. These reactivities occurred with mammary tumor virus purified from either mouse milk or infected feline kidney cells but not with Rauscher murine leukemia virus. For the assessment of the role of peripheral blood mononuclear leukocyte subpopulations in the responsiveness to MuMTV, the cell preparations were fractionated according to their ability to form spontaneous rosettes with sheep red blood cells (E-rosettes). The effectiveness of the separation was ascertained by means of cell surface markers, i.e., presence of surface immunoglobulins or a T-cell marker, Leu-1 antigen, and mitogen-induced blastogenesis. The responsiveness to the MuMTV antigen(s) was associated with the T-cell subset, identified as the E-rosetting, Leu-1-positive, and surface immunoglobulin-negative population. Although some subjects with the normal population gave positive reactions, the results reveal an apparent association between high levels of responsiveness to MuMTV within the T-lymphocyte subset and breast cancer disease.

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