We have established and studied a colony of mice with a unique trait of
host resistance to both ascites and solid cancers induced by
transplantable cells. One dramatic manifestation of this trait is
age-dependent spontaneous regression of advanced cancers. This powerful
resistance segregates as a single-locus dominant trait, is independent of
tumor burden and is effective against cell lines from multiple types of
cancer. During spontaneous regression or immediately following exposure,
cancer cells provoke a massive infiltration of host leukocytes which form
aggregates and rosettes with tumor cells. The cytolytic destruction of
cancer cells by innate leukocytes is rapid and specific without apparent
damage to normal cells. The mice are healthy, cancer-free and have a
normal life span. These observations suggest a previously unrecognized
mechanism of immune surveillance that may have potential for therapy or
prevention of cancer.