Publication | Open Access
Analysis of malignancy in human cells: malignant and transformed phenotypes are under separate genetic control.
135
Citations
33
References
1978
Year
Transformed PhenotypesAnchorage IndependenceCancer PathologyHuman Cell HybridsPathologyCell ProliferationCancer BiologyTumor BiologyTumor HeterogeneityHuman CellsCancer Cell BiologyHela ParentCancer ResearchHealth SciencesMedicineCancer GeneticsCell BiologySeparate Genetic ControlTumor MicroenvironmentMalignant DiseaseDevelopmental BiologyCancer GenomicsOncologyMalignancies
Human cell hybrids derived from malignant HeLa and normal fibroblast parental cells expressed many of the transformed properties of the HeLa parent but their tumor-producing capability was suppressed. Hybrids derived from HeLa/HeLa fusions retained both their transformed and malignant phenotypes. Thus, an apparent separation of the control of the transformed versus malignant phenotype is indicated. Furthermore, several transformed properties--including lack of density-dependent inhibition of growth, lectin agglutination, lowered requirement for serum growth factors, and anchorage independence--are expressed coordinately in the nontumorigenic hybrids. This finding suggests that none of these properties by themselves, or in concert, endows a cell with tumorigenic potential.
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