Increased levels of soluble low-affinity Feγ receptors (IgG-binding factors) in the sera of tumour-bearing mice

2008 
Soluble forms of low affinity Fc gamma receptors (Fc gamma R), also called IgG-binding factors (IgG-BF), have been shown to play a regulatory role in immune responses. By using an immunodot assay with the anti-mouse Fc gamma R MoAb, 2.4G2, the levels of IgG-BF have been measured in the sera of mice bearing syngeneic tumours of lymphoid or non-lymphoid origin or in mice injected with high doses of murine IgG. These sera contained large amounts of IgG-BF as compared with controls. In the case of mice bearing IgG2a- or IgG2b-secreting hybridomas or lymphomas, serum IgG-BF increased progressively with tumour size and serum monoclonal IgG concentration, reaching 4-12 times the normal levels. A less than three-fold increase was found in mice bearing an IgG1-secreting hybridoma or tumours which do not secrete IgG (IgA-secreting hybridoma, non-immunoglobulin-secreting lymphoid tumours or melanoma) or in mice injected with 9 mg of monoclonal IgG2a. The enhancement of serum IgG-BF levels was independent of the expression of Fc gamma R by the tumour cells, suggesting that the majority of IgG-BF secreted in response to tumours was produced by the host rather than by the tumour. The increased production of IgG-BF may participate in the control of tumour growth and in the modulation of the host immune responses in tumour-bearing animals.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    42
    References
    19
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []