| First Author | Carlson GA | Year | 1984 |
| Journal | Immunogenetics | Volume | 20 |
| Issue | 3 | Pages | 287-300 |
| PubMed ID | 6469290 | Mgi Jnum | J:7550 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:56020 | Doi | 10.1007/BF00364210 |
| Citation | Carlson GA, et al. (1984) A genetic analysis of natural resistance to nonsyngeneic cells: the role of H-2. Immunogenetics 20(3):287-300 |
| abstractText | The genetic control of natural resistance in vivo to four natural killer (NK) cell-resistant H-2 homozygous lymphoid tumor cell lines was investigated by following the survival and organ distribution of cells prelabeled with radioactive iododeoxyuridine. Backcross mice derived from DBA/2J and CBA/J parents were injected with H-2d tumor cells and tumor cell elimination was lowest in H-2d homozygotes. Natural killer cell activity was also reduced in mice with the H-2d haplotype, but no direct correlation between NK cell levels against YAC-1 or SL2-5 lymphoma cells and natural resistance in vivo was demonstrable. Analysis of 23 BXD recombinant inbred strains indicated that natural resistance to H-2d tumors was restricted to H-2b strains. There was no direct association of NK cell activity with H-2 type in the BXD strains and NK cell levels did not correlate with tumor survival in vivo. By comparing natural resistance to H-2d and H-2b tumors in DBA/2, C57BL/6, B6D2F1, and B10.D2 mice we found that H-2 nonidentity between the tumor and the host, rather than the host H-2 haplotype, determined whether natural resistance occurred. Again, NK cell activity against YAC-1 cells was not predictive of tumor survival in these strains. These results provide genetic evidence that NK cells alone cannot account for natural resistance to H-2 nonidentical cells of hemopoietic origin. |