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Alterations in the DNA metabolism of MCa-11 mouse mammary tumor cells grown in vivo and in vitro.
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1986
Year
Breast OncologyGrowth RatesPathologyCell ProliferationCancer BiologyTumor BiologyCancer Cell BiologyCancer MetabolismRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchHealth SciencesTumor GrowthMammary GlandCell BiologyMouse Mammary CarcinomaTumor MicroenvironmentMalignant DiseaseEndocrine-related CancerDna MetabolismBreast CancerMedicineCancer Growth
Mouse mammary carcinoma (MCa-11) cells were grown in vitro in exponential, plateau-fed, and starved monolayer cultures or as 100-, 250-, and 500-microns tissue culture spheroids, and in vivo as small (4-mm diameter) and large (12-mm diameter) tumors. In all of these forms, the growth rates of the MCa-11 cells were found to decrease after an initial rapid proliferation of a relatively small number of cells. The DNA distributions of these cells during different rates of growth in vitro and in vivo, as well as the proportion and intensity of labeling of the S-phase cells with [3H]thymidine and [3H]deoxyuridine, were measured by flow and absorption cytometry. We found that significant numbers of MCa-11 cells remained in S phase, even after the growth rates in vivo and in vitro had slowed. However, as growth rates decreased, the intensity and proportion of S-phase cells labeled with exogenous DNA precursors decreased. We conclude that progressive alterations, including possible slowing and cessation, of replicative DNA synthesis occur in S-phase tumor cells as the metabolic constraints on tumor growth are increased.