Introduction of the activated N-ras oncogene into human fibroblasts by retroviral vector induces morphological transformation and tumorigenicity.
Kinsella, Anne R ; Fiszer-Maliszewska, Lucja ; Mitchell, Erika L D ; Guo, Ya-Ping ; Fox, Margaret ; Scott, David
Kinsella, Anne R
Fiszer-Maliszewska, Lucja
Mitchell, Erika L D
Guo, Ya-Ping
Fox, Margaret
Scott, David
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Abstract
The introduction of activated N-ras cDNA into normal diploid human skin fibroblast cell cultures using the retroviral vector pZIPneo results in a spectrum of morphologies ranging from near normal to, in rare instances, dense piled-up colonies of morphologically transformed cells. However, none of the clones isolated were transformed as assessed by growth on agar or tumorigenicity in nude mice. Introduction of both c-myc and N-ras oncogene cDNAs into normal skin fibroblasts failed to produce transformation as assessed by growth on agar and tumorigenicity in nude mice, although c-myc infection alone conferred immortality and the resultant doubly infected cell line was immortal. Using the same construct, activated N-ras cDNA was shown to transform immortalized human fibroblasts to tumorigenicity. However, immortalization per se was shown not to guarantee 'co-operation' with an activated N-ras gene to give malignant transformation. Although numerical and structural chromosome aberrations (clonal and non-clonal) were observed in some of the cell strains isolated after retroviral infection, these were not directly associated with viral infection, the presence of the oncogenes or with the morphologically transformed phenotype.
Description
Date
1990-10
Publisher
Collections
Keywords
Cancerous Cell Transformation
Cancer DNA
Cancer DNA
Type
Article
Citation
Introduction of the activated N-ras oncogene into human fibroblasts by retroviral vector induces morphological transformation and tumorigenicity. 1990, 11 (10):1803-9 Carcinogenesis