Characterization of antisera against mouse teratocarcinoma OTT6050: Molecular species recognized on embryoid bodies, preimplantation embryos, and sperm

1980 
Abstract Antisera raised in rabbits by hyperimmunization with small embryoid bodies of the transplantable teratocarcinoma OTT6050 recognize several distinct antigenic protein species on the surfaces of cells of the immunogen. Some of these antigens were found on the cells of preimplantation mouse embryos, on cells from parietal yolk sac carcinoma, and on mouse sperm. These antigens have been distinguished by polyacrylamide electrophoresis of the immune precipitates from detergent extracts of lactoperoxidase-iodinated cells. The intact embryoid bodies from the ascitic form of the OTT6050 teratocarcinoma exhibited five major protein bands (approximate MW 150K, 115K, 82K, 48K, and 12K), one band that ran at the dye front of the gels ( R f ≥1) and one minor band (approximate MW 22K). Two different rabbit antisera recognized an essentially identical pattern of antigens which, however, varied on the different cell types tested. Antisera were also elicited in syngeneic male mice using glutaraldehyde-fixed or irradiated OTT6050 embryoid bodies. The isoantisera had very poor titers in comparison to the absorbed xenoantisera, as assessed by complement-mediated cytotoxic activity against the immunizing cell types. Complement-mediated cytotoxicity could also be demonstrated using parietal yolk sac carcinoma cells, preimplantation mouse embryos from all cleavage stages, blastocysts, and immunosurgically isolated inner cell masses, as targets. The complexity of the antisera generated by intact embryoid bodies described here indicates that these structures bear multiple antigenic specificities not present on adult somatic cells, some of which are stage-specific embryonic polypeptides.
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