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T24 HRAS transformed NIH/3T3 mouse cells (GhrasT-NIH/3T3) in serial tumorigenic in vitro/in vivo passages give rise to increasingly aggressive tumorigenic cell lines T1-A and T2-A and metastatic cell lines T3-HA and T4-PA.
Ray, Durwood B; Merrill, Gerald A; Brenner, Frederic J; Lytle, Laurie S; Lam, Tan; McElhinney, Aaron; Anders, Joel; Rock, Tara Tauber; Lyker, Jennifer Kier; Barcus, Scott; Leslie, Kara Hust; Kramer, Jill M; Rubenstein, Eric M; Pryor Schanz, Karen; Parkhurst, Amy J; Peck, Michelle; Good, Kimberly; Granath, Kristi Lemke; Cifra, Nicole; Detweiler, Jessalee Wantz; Stevens, Laura; Albertson, Richard; Deir, Rachael; Stewart, Elisabeth; Wingard, Katherine; Richardson, Micah Rose; Blizard, Sarah B; Gillespie, Lauren E; Kriley, Charles E; Rzewnicki, Daniel I; Jones, David H.
Afiliação
  • Ray DB; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA; Department of Biochemistry, Oral Roberts University School of Medicine, 7777 S Lewis Ave, Tulsa, OK 74171, USA. Electronic address: raydb@gcc.edu.
  • Merrill GA; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: Merrilljer@aol.com.
  • Brenner FJ; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: BrennerFJ@gcc.edu.
  • Lytle LS; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: LSLytle@gcc.edu.
  • Lam T; Department of Biochemistry, Oral Roberts University School of Medicine, 7777 S Lewis Ave, Tulsa, OK 74171, USA. Electronic address: tanmlam@aol.com.
  • McElhinney A; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: aaron.mcelhinney@msn.com.
  • Anders J; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: jba6776@yahoo.com.
  • Rock TT; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: taramtauber@yahoo.com.
  • Lyker JK; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: jenlyker@gmail.com.
  • Barcus S; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: scott.barcus@gmail.com.
  • Leslie KH; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: karaleslie31@gmail.com.
  • Kramer JM; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: jkramer@buffalo.edu.
  • Rubenstein EM; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: emrubenstein@bsu.edu.
  • Pryor Schanz K; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: kkschanz@yahoo.com.
  • Parkhurst AJ; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: amyjparkhurst@gmail.com.
  • Peck M; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: Peckmichellea@gmail.com.
  • Good K; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: kimberlyross@gmail.com.
  • Granath KL; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: granathkl@gmail.com.
  • Cifra N; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: cifranm1@gmail.com.
  • Detweiler JW; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: mattnjessd@gmail.com.
  • Stevens L; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: laura.stevens2011@gmail.com.
  • Albertson R; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: rma165@psu.edu.
  • Deir R; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: rd41193n@pace.edu.
  • Stewart E; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: elisabeth.e.stewart@gmail.com.
  • Wingard K; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: wingardkl1@gmail.com.
  • Richardson MR; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: RichardsonMR1@gcc.edu.
  • Blizard SB; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: BlizardSB1@gcc.edu.
  • Gillespie LE; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: GillespieLE1@gcc.edu.
  • Kriley CE; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: cekrieley@gcc.edu.
  • Rzewnicki DI; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA. Electronic address: Rzewnickidi1@gcc.edu.
  • Jones DH; Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA; Department of Biochemistry, Oral Roberts University School of Medicine, 7777 S Lewis Ave, Tulsa, OK 74171, USA. Electronic address: j.jeandave@gmail.com.
Exp Cell Res ; 340(1): 1-11, 2016 Jan 01.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26254261
ABSTRACT
Cancer cells often arise progressively from "normal" to "pre-cancer" to "transformed" to "local metastasis" to "metastatic disease" to "aggressive metastatic disease". Recent whole genome sequencing (WGS) and spectral karyotyping (SKY) of cancer cells and tumorigenic models have shown this progression involves three major types of genome rearrangements ordered small step-wise changes, more dramatic "punctuated evolution" (chromoplexy), and large catastrophic steps (chromothripsis) which all occur in random combinations to generate near infinite numbers of stochastically rearranged metastatic cancer cell genomes. This paper describes a series of mouse cell lines developed sequentially to mimic this type of progression. This starts with the new GhrasT-NIH/Swiss cell line that was produced from the NIH/3T3 cell line that had been transformed by transfection with HRAS oncogene DNA from the T24 human bladder carcinoma. These GhrasT-NIH/Swiss cells were injected s.c. into NIH/Swiss mice to produce primary tumors from which one was used to establish the T1-A cell line. T1-A cells injected i.v. into the tail vein of a NIH/Swiss mouse produced a local metastatic tumor near the base of the tail from which the T2-A cell line was established. T2-A cells injected i.v. into the tail vein of a nude NIH/Swiss mouse produced metastases in the liver and one lung from which the T3-HA (H=hepatic) and T3-PA (P=pulmonary) cell lines were developed, respectively. T3-HA cells injected i.v. into a nude mouse produced a metastasis in the lung from which the T4-PA cell line was established. PCR analysis indicated the human T24 HRAS oncogene was carried along with each in vitro/in vivo transfer step and found in the T2-A and T4-PA cell lines. Light photomicrographs indicate that all transformed cells are morphologically similar. GhrasT-NIH/Swiss cells injected s.c. produced tumors in 4% of NIH/Swiss mice in 6-10 weeks; T1-A cells injected s.c. produced tumors in 100% of NIH/Swiss mice in 7-10 days. T1-A, T-2A, T3-HA and T4-PA cells when injected i.v. into the tail produced local metastasis in non-nude or nude NIH/Swiss mice. T4-PA cells were more widely metastatic than T3-HA cells when injected i.v. into nude mice. Evaluation of the injected mice indicated a general increase in metastatic potential of each cell line in the progression as compared to the GhrasT-NIH/3T3 transformed cells. A new photomicrographic technique to follow growth rates within six preselected 2×2mm(2) grids per plate is described. Average doubling times of the transformed cells GhrasT-NIH/3T3 (17h), T1A (17.5h), T2A (15.5h), T3-HA (17.5h) and T4-PA (18.5h) (average 17.2h) were significantly faster (P=0.006) than NIH Swiss primary embryonic cells and NIH/3T3 cells (22 h each). This cell series is currently used in this lab for studies of cancer cell inhibitors, mitochondrial biogenesis and gene expression and is available for further study by other investigators for intra- and inter-laboratory comparisons of WGS, transcriptome sequencing, SKY and other analyses. The genome rearrangements in these cells together with their phenotypic properties may help provide more insights into how one tumorigenic progression occurred to produce the various cell lines that led to the highly metastatic T4-PA cell line.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Neoplasias da Bexiga Urinária / Transformação Celular Neoplásica / Progressão da Doença / Metástase Neoplásica Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2016 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Neoplasias da Bexiga Urinária / Transformação Celular Neoplásica / Progressão da Doença / Metástase Neoplásica Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2016 Tipo de documento: Article