238 Pu a-particle-induced C3H10T1/2 transformants are less tumorigenic than the X-ray-induced equivalent

M Lehane, Peter Edward Bryant, Andrew Clive Riches, L Allen, T Briscoe, J Melville, A Mille

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Transformation is a complex multistage process in vitro by which benign cells gradually acquire characteristics of tumour cells. Transformed C3H10T1/2 cells appear in vitro as multilayers of cells termed foci. A variety of transformed phenotypes are observed in vitro and in this study samples of these phenotypes were developed as cell lines and assessed for their ability to induce tumours in C3H mice. It was found that, while a high proportion of X-ray-induced transformants were tumorigenic, most of the alpha-particle-induced transformants were non-tumorigenic. Although tumours produced by the X-ray-induced transformants appeared earlier, they grew at similar rates to the alpha-particle-induced equivalent. Foci were classified as fully or partially tumorigenic depending on whether the foci produced at least one tumour in the mice injected (partially tumorigenic) or produced tumours in all mice injected (fully tumorigenic). It was found that tumours from the partially tumorigenic foci grew slower or appeared later than those of the fully tumorigenic foci. It is hypothesized that the apparent low tumorigenicity of positively transformed alpha-particle-induced foci is due to an increase in genomic instability of progeny focus cells compared with Xray-induced foci leading to a larger non-viable population of cells in the alpha-particle-induced foci.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)35-40
Number of pages6
JournalCarcinogenesis
Volume20
Publication statusPublished - Jan 1999

Keywords

  • SISTER CHROMATID EXCHANGES
  • MOUSE 10T1/2 CELLS
  • MAMMALIAN-CELLS
  • POSTCONFLUENCE INHIBITION
  • ONCOGENIC TRANSFORMATION
  • C3H-10T1/2 CELLS
  • DNA-DAMAGE
  • C3H 10T1/2
  • RADIATION
  • INDUCTION

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