Partial suppression of tumorigenicity in a human lung cancer cell line transfected with Krev-1.
A human non-small-cell lung carcinoma cell line, Calu-6 (from an anaplastic carcinoma), was transfected with the Ki-ras-related anti-oncogene Krev-1. Several transfectant lines were obtained that showed a reduced tumorigenicity in nude mice with respect to the parental and control transfected cell lines. This decrease was approximately 50% in tumor incidence at 4 wk after subcutaneous inoculation of the transfected cells. In addition, the volume of the Calu-6 revertant-derived tumors was three to 10 times smaller than that of the equivalent tumors produced by inoculation of the control cell line transfected with the neomycin-resistance gene. Krev-1--transfected cells that exhibited reduced tumorigenicity expressed Krev-1 mRNA and had variable numbers of copies of the Krev-1 gene. Moreover, Krev-1--transfected cells exhibited a more differentiated squamous epithelial morphology than the parental and control cell lines did. Moderately elevated levels of protein kinase C activity were detected in some revertant clones. Such activity correlated with the level of expression of Krev-1 mRNA in most cases. In summary, Krev-1 induced important morphological and biological changes in transfected Calu-6 cells that we interpreted as partial reversion of the malignant phenotype.[1]References
- Partial suppression of tumorigenicity in a human lung cancer cell line transfected with Krev-1. Caamano, J., DiRado, M., Iizasa, T., Momiki, S., Fernandes, E., Ashendel, C., Noda, M., Klein-Szanto, A.J. Mol. Carcinog. (1992) [Pubmed]
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