THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS
The V2 carcinoma—a transplanted rabbit cancer derived originally from a virus-induced papilloma and carrying in masked or altered form the virus primarily responsible for it—was propagated in five successive groups of animals all previously hyperimmunized against the papilloma virus. The cancer gre...
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The Rockefeller University Press
1942
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Online Access: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2135214/ |
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pubmed-21352142008-04-18 THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS Kidd, John G. Article The V2 carcinoma—a transplanted rabbit cancer derived originally from a virus-induced papilloma and carrying in masked or altered form the virus primarily responsible for it—was propagated in five successive groups of animals all previously hyperimmunized against the papilloma virus. The cancer grew as well in the hyperimmunized hosts as in normal animals implanted during the same months; and serological tests, made when the tumor was eventually returned to ordinary hosts, proved that the virus was still associated with the carcinoma cells: it had increased to the usual extent as the tumor grew in the hyperimmune animals. The continued increase of the neoplastic virus during propagation of the V2 carcinoma in hyperimmunized hosts contrasts sharply with the elimination of certain extraneous passenger viruses when the tumors they ride upon are grown in hosts previously immunized against them. The facts as a whole would seem to warrant a distinction between the enduring partnership of a neoplastic virus and carcinoma cells on the one hand and the casual association of passenger viruses with tumor cells on the other. The Rockefeller University Press 1942-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2135214/ /pubmed/19871169 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1942, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/). |
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Open Access Journal |
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Foreign Institution |
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US National Center for Biotechnology Information |
building |
NCBI PubMed |
collection |
Online Access |
language |
English |
format |
Online |
author |
Kidd, John G. |
spellingShingle |
Kidd, John G. THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS |
author_facet |
Kidd, John G. |
author_sort |
Kidd, John G. |
title |
THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS |
title_short |
THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS |
title_full |
THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS |
title_fullStr |
THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS |
title_full_unstemmed |
THE ENDURING PARTNERSHIP OF A NEOPLASTIC VIRUS AND CARCINOMA CELLS : CONTINUED INCREASE OF VIRUS IN THE V2 CARCINOMA DURING PROPAGATION IN VIRUS-IMMUNE HOSTS |
title_sort |
enduring partnership of a neoplastic virus and carcinoma cells : continued increase of virus in the v2 carcinoma during propagation in virus-immune hosts |
description |
The V2 carcinoma—a transplanted rabbit cancer derived originally from a virus-induced papilloma and carrying in masked or altered form the virus primarily responsible for it—was propagated in five successive groups of animals all previously hyperimmunized against the papilloma virus. The cancer grew as well in the hyperimmunized hosts as in normal animals implanted during the same months; and serological tests, made when the tumor was eventually returned to ordinary hosts, proved that the virus was still associated with the carcinoma cells: it had increased to the usual extent as the tumor grew in the hyperimmune animals. The continued increase of the neoplastic virus during propagation of the V2 carcinoma in hyperimmunized hosts contrasts sharply with the elimination of certain extraneous passenger viruses when the tumors they ride upon are grown in hosts previously immunized against them. The facts as a whole would seem to warrant a distinction between the enduring partnership of a neoplastic virus and carcinoma cells on the one hand and the casual association of passenger viruses with tumor cells on the other. |
publisher |
The Rockefeller University Press |
publishDate |
1942 |
url |
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2135214/ |
_version_ |
1611419338246455296 |