Spontaneous and chemically induced transformation of rat embryo cell cultures

Spontaneous and chemically induced transformation of rat embryo cell cultures


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The transformation of Wistar rat embryo cells in vitro has been studied in passaged cultures using two criteria for transformation: (1) the ability of cells to form colonies in soft agar and


(2) the ability of cells to form tumours in young syngeneic animals. In general there was good correlation between the two criteria. Spontaneous transformation was observed in all untreated


cultures by 44 weeks although, by not allowing the cells to become confluent, the tendency was for cultures to transform earlier (i.e. 15-21 weeks). It was noticeable that despite untreated


cultures having been in vitro for different lengths of time, most cultures transformed after a similar number of passages (42-50). Treatment of the embryo cells with the alkylating agent


nitrosomethylurea (NMU) or benzo(alpha)pyrene (BP) sometimes resulted in transformation after a shorter period in vitro than the controls (minimum 12 weeks) although some treated cultures


took longer. Transformed cells produced transplantable fibrosarcomata in syngeneic hosts and those arising from NMU transformed cells were histologically different from those arising from


spontaneously transformed cells. The significant of spontaneous transformation in in vitro rat cell transformation systems is discussed.


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