Immunohistochemical analysis of proliferation and differentiation in organotypic cultures of cervical tumor cell lines.
Researchers have previously demonstrated that organotypic cultures of cervical tumor cell lines exhibit morphological characteristics similar to the in vivo biopsies from which they were derived (Rader et al., 1990). Both the in vivo biopsy and organotypic culture appeared undifferentiated. We have extended these studies with immunohistochemical analysis using the proliferation and differentiation markers, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and involucrin, respectively, to evaluate in more detail the ability of cervical tumor cell lines to differentiate in organotypic culture. An HPV-immortalized keratinocyte cell line, PE-4, expressed PCNA in the lower half and involucrin in the upper half of the organotypic culture which is consistent with the characteristics of a preneoplastic lesion in vivo. The CC-1 cell line, derived from an invasive squamous cell carcinoma, appeared undifferentiated, but expressed involucrin in the upper half of the organotypic culture. This is the first observation of expression of a differentiation marker in an organotypic culture of a cervical tumor cell line. The other cervical tumor cell lines, SiHa and HeLa, derived from a squamous cell carcinoma, and an adenocarcinoma of the cervix, respectively, did not express detectable levels of involucrin or mucin. All three cervical tumor cell lines, CC-1, SiHa and HeLa, expressed PCNA throughout their entire thickness. The majority of nuclei in SiHa and HeLa cultures were PCNA-positive, while the CC-1 cell line exhibited a lower growth fraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[1]References
- Immunohistochemical analysis of proliferation and differentiation in organotypic cultures of cervical tumor cell lines. Benbrook, D.M., Rogers, R.S., Medlin, M.A., Dunn, S.T. Tissue & cell. (1995) [Pubmed]
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