Monoclonal antibodies to early pregnancy factor perturb tumour cell growth

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Abstract

The pregnancy-associated substance early pregnancy factor (EPF) has previously been reported as a product of tumours of germ cell origin. More recently EPF (or an EPF-related substance, tEPF) has also been detected in the serum of patient bearing tumours of non-germ cell origin. We report here the production of tEPF by a variety of cultured transformed and tumour cell lines, of both germ and non-germ cell origin. Antibodies specific for EPF remove all tEPF activity from tumour cell conditioned medium. tEPF production is found to be associated with cell division; tEPF is no longer detected after growth arrest or differentiation. Co-culture of tumour cells with increasing doses of anti-EPF monoclonal antibodies resulted in a significant, dose-dependent decrease in rate of cell growth and viability. Similar anti-EPF concentrations had no effect on the concanavalin A induced proliferation of mouse spleen cells. These studies suggest, therefore, that tEPF is a growth-regulated product of cultured tumour and transformed cells. These cells are also dependent upon tEPF for continued growth, i.e. tEPF is acting in the autocrine mode.

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Quinn, K. A., Athanasas-Platsis, S., Wong, T. Y., Rolfe, B. E., Cavanagh, A. C., & Morton, H. (1990). Monoclonal antibodies to early pregnancy factor perturb tumour cell growth. Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 80(1), 100–108. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2249.1990.tb06448.x

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