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Science 15 September 1972:
Vol. 177. no. 4053, pp. 998 - 1000
DOI: 10.1126/science.177.4053.998

Articles

Control of Carcinogenesis: A Possible Role for the Activated Macrophage

John B. Hibbs Jr. 1, Lewis H. Lambert Jr. 2, and Jack S. Remington 1

1 Division o] Allergy, Imnmnuinology, and Infectious Diseases, Palo AIto Medical Research Foundationi, Palo Alto, Californzia 94301, and Division of Inifectious Diseases. Department of Medicine, Stanford Uniiversity School of Medicine. Palo A Ito 94305
2 Division o] Allergy, Imnmnuinology, and Infectious Diseases, Palo AIto Medical Research Foundationi, Palo Alto, Californzia 94301, and Division of Inifectious Diseases. Departmnent of Medicine, Stanford Uniiversity School of Medicine. Palo A Ito 94305

Cytotoxic activity of activated mouse macrophages against mouse embryo fibroblasts was tested before and after spontaneous transformation of the fibroblasts in vitro. Activated macrophages caused little or no destruction of untransformed fibroblasts but were markedly cytotoxic to the same fibroblasts after spontaneous transformation. The efferent limb of this cytotoxic reaction appears to be nonimmunologic and to be related to abnormal growth properties rather than to the antigenic composition of target cells.


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Heterocytolysis by Macrophages Activated by Bacillus Calmette-Guerin: Lysosome Exocytosis into Tumor Cells.
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