TY - JOUR
T1 - Isolation of human diploid cell variants with enhanced colony-forming efficiency in semisolid medium after a single-step chemical mutagenesis
T2 - Brief communication
AU - Freedman, Victoria H.
AU - Shin, Seung Il
N1 - Funding Information:
ABBREVIATIONS USED: SV40 = simian virus 40; MNNG = N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine; PBS = phosphate-buffered saline. 1 Received December 3, 1976; accepted December 21, 1976. 2 Supported by Public Health Service grants l-ROI-GM21014 and 1-P03-GMI9100, a Genetics Center grant to Albert Einstein College of Medicine, from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. 3 Department of Genetics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, N.Y. 10461. 4 Supported by training grant 5T32 CA09173 in immunology and immuno-oncology from the National Cancer Institute. 5 Recipient of a Faculty Research Award from the American Cancer Society.
PY - 1977/6
Y1 - 1977/6
N2 - To examine the role of somatic mutation in malignant transformation, we studied the induction of anchorage-independent variants from normal human diploid fibroblasts by single-step mutagenesis in vitro. Primary cell strains from normal human embryo and newborn (foreskin) tissues were treated with N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and plated in methylcellu-lose. Growing colonies were obtained at a frequency of about 10–5 per mutagenized cell. In untreated controls, the frequency of colony-forming cells was less than 10–8. In many of the colonies isolated from methylcellulose, the enhanced ability to form colonies in the semisolid medium was maintained as a stable property. These "anchorage-transformed" clones were unchanged in morphology but formed multilayered foci in confluent monolayer culture. In chromosome composition, ability to plate in 1% serum, and susceptibility to cellular senescence, they were not distinguishable from the parental cells. When injected into nude mice, the variants did not produce tumors. These results indicated that human diploid cell variants specifically transformed with respect to anchorage regulation of growth can be induced by a singlestep mutagenesis in vitro, and that other transformed phenotypes are not necessarily expressed In such variants.
AB - To examine the role of somatic mutation in malignant transformation, we studied the induction of anchorage-independent variants from normal human diploid fibroblasts by single-step mutagenesis in vitro. Primary cell strains from normal human embryo and newborn (foreskin) tissues were treated with N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and plated in methylcellu-lose. Growing colonies were obtained at a frequency of about 10–5 per mutagenized cell. In untreated controls, the frequency of colony-forming cells was less than 10–8. In many of the colonies isolated from methylcellulose, the enhanced ability to form colonies in the semisolid medium was maintained as a stable property. These "anchorage-transformed" clones were unchanged in morphology but formed multilayered foci in confluent monolayer culture. In chromosome composition, ability to plate in 1% serum, and susceptibility to cellular senescence, they were not distinguishable from the parental cells. When injected into nude mice, the variants did not produce tumors. These results indicated that human diploid cell variants specifically transformed with respect to anchorage regulation of growth can be induced by a singlestep mutagenesis in vitro, and that other transformed phenotypes are not necessarily expressed In such variants.
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U2 - 10.1093/jnci/58.6.1873
DO - 10.1093/jnci/58.6.1873
M3 - Article
C2 - 864766
AN - SCOPUS:0017648184
SN - 0027-8874
VL - 58
SP - 1873
EP - 1875
JO - Journal of the National Cancer Institute
JF - Journal of the National Cancer Institute
IS - 6
ER -