Abstract: | A comparison has been made of the immunological properties of CEA (carcinoembryonic antigen) and another perchloric acid-soluble macromolecule which occurs in colonic and certain other carcinomata and which is here termed CEX. By using a variety of antisera it was shown that the two substances share common antigenic groups as well as having characteristic ones of their own. These latter groups have enabled the preparation of (a) antisera which give a gel diffusion line only with CEA and (b) and antiserum which gives a line only with CEX. No immunological difference could be found between CEX and the NGP of Mach or the NCA of von Kleist and Burtin. CEX was found in foetal gut, in plasma and associated with CEA in virtually all the tissues and fluids in which the latter occurs; the two appear to go hand-in-hand and no proof was found that CEX is either less or more cancer specific than CEA—it is merely found in greater quantity; neither substance showed absolute cancer specificity. The usefulness of a radioimmunoassay for CEX is discussed, and also the possibility of interference by CEX in the radioimmunoassay for CEA. Evidence of two molecular species of CEA has been found. |