DIFFERENTIATION OF A PRIMARY CHEMICALLY INDUCED RAT NEPHROBLASTOMA IN ORGAN CULTURE |
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Authors: | WINSTON D. EDWARDS JULES J. BERMAN JERRY M. RICE MARK W. TOWNSEND |
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Affiliation: | Laboratory of Experimental Pathology, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20205, USA;Laboratory of Experimental Pathology, Microbiological Associates. Inc., Bethesda, MD 20016, USA |
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Abstract: | The differentiation in organ culture of a rat nephroblastoma is compared with differentiation of normal rat metanephric tissue under the same conditions. The nephroblastoma arose in a 19 week old female Fischer F344 rat given a single intraperitoneal injection of 4.0 μmole methyl(methoxymethy1)nitrosamine (DMN-OMe)/g body weight at one day of age. The tumor consisted almost entirely of spindle cells although a few well-differentiated tubules were scattered throughout the tumor mass. No primitive tubules were seen, but focal aggregates of tumor cells suggestive of nascent epithelial differentiation were frequent. Fragments of the nephroblastoma were cultured on gelfoam sponge in Williams Medium E supplemented with hydrocortisone, insulin, and fetal bovine serum. Within one day extensive tubulogenesis was observed. High mitotic activity resulted in a steady increase in the size of cultured explants over a period of 6 days. By day six, differentiating tubules filled the explant tissue. Cultured fragments were nearly indistinguishable histologically from normal F344 rat fetal kidney explanted to organ culture on day 15 of gestation and grown in vitro for the same period. |
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