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- S D Balk, H S Gunther, and A Morisi.
- Life Sci. 1984 Sep 10;35(11):1157-71.
AbstractNormal chicken heart mesenchymal cells at low density in monolayer culture in plasma-containing medium have a polygonal shape and are proliferatively quiescent. The combination of epidermal growth factor and insulin at hyperphysiological concentration, an insulin-like growth factor surrogate, causes these cells to assume a fusiform shape and to increase 40-fold in number during four days of incubation. These mitogenic hormones do not, however, induce normal chicken heart mesenchymal cells to form colonies in agarose suspension culture. Chicken heart mesenchymal cells infected with the Schmidt-Ruppin or Prague-A strains of Rous sarcoma virus or with the Fujinami or Y73 avian sarcoma viruses assume spindle and round shapes, increase 50-100 fold in number during four days of monolayer culture in the absence of mitogenic hormones and form macroscopic colonies during 3-4 days of agarose suspension culture. The autonomous (mitogenic hormone-independent) proliferation, in monolayer culture, of cells infected with temperature-sensitive transformation mutants of Rous sarcoma virus (tsNY68, tsNY72, tsLA24, tsLA29) is temperature-sensitive. Chicken heart mesenchymal cells infected with avian erythroblastosis virus assume spindle shapes and proliferate in monolayer culture at a rate comparable to that of sarcoma virus-infected cells but do not, however, form colonies in agarose suspension culture. Cells infected with the myelocytomatosis virus MC29 assume stellate shapes and increase 18-fold in number during four days of monolayer culture. Cells infected with the myelocytomatosis virus MH2 assume fusiform shapes and increase fourfold in number during four days of monolayer culture. Neither MC29 nor MH2 renders chicken heart mesenchymal cells capable of colony formation in agarose suspension culture. Infection with avian leukosis viruses (RAV-1, RAV-2, RPL-42) or with transformation-defective mutants of Rous sarcoma virus (tdNY105, 107, 109) does not affect the morphology or proliferative behavior of chicken heart mesenchymal cells. Monolayer culture of chicken heart mesenchymal cells in plasma-containing medium appears, therefore, to define the ability of onc genes of acute transforming avian retroviruses to induce autonomous (mitogenic hormone-independent) cell proliferation, the essential characteristic of neoplasia. The differences in transformed morphology and rates of autonomous proliferation between cells infected with different acute transforming retroviruses probably reflects differences in the modes of action of the transforming proteins encoded by the onc genes of the respective viruses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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