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Correlation of the inability to sustain growth in defined serum-free medium with the suppression of tumorigenicity in Wilms' nephroblastoma.
Authors:S F Dowdy  B E Weissman  E J Stanbridge
Institution:Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of California, Irvine 92717.
Abstract:We report the investigation of the growth properties of tumorigenic and reverted nontumorigenic Wilms' nephroblastoma cells when cultured in serum-free medium. Wilms' tumor, a pediatric nephroblastoma, has been associated with deletions encompassing the p13 band of chromosome 11 and an independent loss of heterozygosity at 11p15. Weissman et al. (Science 236:175-180, 1987) transferred a human der(11) chromosome into the G401.6TG.6 Wilms' tumor cell line via the microcell-mediated chromosome transfer technique. The resulting microcell hybrids were nontumorigenic when assayed in nude mice; however these cells retained all of the in vitro growth and morphological characteristics of the tumorigenic parental cells in 10% fetal calf serum (FCS). Segregation of the der(11) chromosome from the nontumorigenic microcell hybrid cells resulted in the reappearance of the tumorigenic phenotype in vivo. In vitro culture of these cell lines in serum-free medium supplemented with 0.1% bovine serum albumin (BSA) and 10 ng/ml Na2O3Se resulted in sustained growth of both the tumorigenic parent and the tumorigenic segregant while the nontumorigenic microcell hybrids were unable to divide. The separate addition of either 10 ng/ml of epidermal growth factor (EGF) or 5 micrograms/ml of insulin did not alter this effect. However, the addition of 5 micrograms/ml of transferrin stimulated the nontumorigenic microcell hybrid cells to grow at a rate comparable to the tumorigenic cells. In addition, conditioned serum-free medium from the tumorigenic parental or tumorigenic segregant cell lines was able to stimulate the growth of the nontumorigenic microcell hybrid cells, whereas the reciprocal experiment had no effect on the growth of the tumorigenic cells. These data suggest that the inability of the microcell hybrid cells to grow in serum-free conditions is correlated with their genetic nontumorigenic phenotype and that a specific growth factor, transferrin, can bypass or alter this negative growth regulatory pathway(s) in vitro.
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