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Cells derived from human atherosclerotic plaques and from arterial media were compared with cells obtained from human leiomyomata and myometrium with respect to growth behavior in long-term cell culture. None of numerous variations in culture media, including alterations of serum concentration and source, improved the rate of cell multiplication or in vitro longevity. Both uterine cell types, but neither arterial cell type, multiplied after tissue dissociation with enzymes (elastase, collagenase, hyaluronidase). The replicative life-span of each of eight samples of arterial plaque cells was equal to or less than that of the corresponding medial cells. A similar relationship was observed for eight paired sets of leiomyoma and myometrial cells. The results indicate that, under the conditions of culture in vitro, cells of a bona fide smooth muscle tumor have a finite replicative life-span and smooth muscle cells of atherosclerotic plaques behave in a similar manner.
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PMID:Human atherosclerotic plaque cells and leiomyoma cells. Comparison of in vitro growth characteristics. 16 92

The dual potential of poxviruses to be cytolytic and tumorgenic has been extended. Yaba monkey tumor virus formed foci on monkey and human embryonic cells. Cytolytic or plaque-forming virus was isolated from Yaba tumor homogenates by selective sucrose centrifugation and passage through monkey or human embryonic cells. Monkey pox virus (MPV) was cytolytic for monkey cells or human embryonic cells, but upon passage onto young monolayers of human carcinoma cells, HeLa, produced a restricted cytopathic effect on first transfer, foci on second transfer and cytolysis after the fourth transfer. If HeLa monolayers were compact, the rapid growth precluded overt expression of cytolytic MPV. Electron micrographs of cytolytic Yaba indicated that Yaba development was similar to vaccinia and MPV but not totally organized. Growth curves of vaccinia, MPV and cytolytic Yaba were essentially identical in monkey and human embryonic cell lines.
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PMID:Human and primate poxviruses: I. Growth characteristics of cytolytic and tumor variants. 16 85

Myeloblastosis-associated virus (MAV)-2(0), a virus which was derived from avian myeloblastosis virus and induced a high incidence of osteopetrosis, was compared with avian lymphomatosis virus 5938, a recent field isolate which induced a high incidence of lymphomatosis. The following information was obtained. (i) MAV-2(0) induced osteopetrosis, nephroblastoma, and a very low incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma. No difference was seen in the oncogenic spectrum of end point and plaque-purified MAV-2(0). (ii) 125I-labeled RNA sequences from MAV-2(0) formed hybrids with DNA extracted from osteopetrotic bone at a rate suggesting five proviral copies per haploid cell genome. The extent of hybridization of MAV-2(0) RNA with DNA from osteopetrotic tissue was more extensive (87%) than was observed in reactions with DNA from uninfected chicken embryos (52%). (iii) Competition of unlabeled viral RNA in hybridization reactions between the radioactive RNA from the two viruses and their respective proviral sequences present in tumor tissues showed that 15 to 20% of the viral sequences detected in these reactions were unshared. In contrast, no differences were detected in competition analyses of RNA sequences from the two viruses detected in DNA of normal chicken cells. (iv) MAV-2(0) 35S RNA was indistinguishable in size from avian lymphomatosis virus 5938 35S RNA by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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PMID:Comparison of an avian osteopetrosis virus with an avian lymphomatosis virus by RNA-DNA hybridization. 17 80

Simian virus 40 (SV40) infection of human skin fibroblast and human tumor cells resulted in the expression of T-antigen and transformed foci. By examining various conditions of input virus multiplicity and initial cell density, the systematic variation of T-antigen determination was minimized. The most uniform results were obtained at multiplicities of about 275 plaque-forming units/cell. Within limits (5 X 10(4) to 2 X 10(5) cells/dish), initial cell density had little effect on T-antigen expression. Volume of virus inoculum was critical for some cell lines, but not for others. Cell passage level had no general effect on T-antigen expression, although specific cell lines demonstrated increased or decreased levels of T-antigen expression with serial passage for no apparent reason. T-antigen expression correlated with virus-induced cell transformation (focus formation) at two different multiplicities. In addition, T-antigen assays at 3 days gave consistently more reproducible results than transformation assays at 21 days in seven cell lines tested at two multiplicities of infection. These results defined input multiplicity as the major source of systematic variability and will permit development of a more reproducible tool in the evaluation of individuals at high risk of cancer.
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PMID:Systematic variables affecting simian virus 40-induced T-antigen expression and transformation in human cells. 18 99

Until relatively recently, interest has largely centered upon the causal role of oncogenic viruses especially with respect to the development of murine lymphomas. Host factors have recently come to the fore and are considered to be effective here, where we note that, in spite of relatively high levels of C-type viral antigen in the AKR X CBA F1 mouse, this hybrid remains relatively lymphoma resistant. Evidence points to an overriding host factor in this situation that is dominant with respect to tumor resistance and furthermore independent of the viral load at least as judged by levels of p30 viral antigen, an assumption confirmed by xc plaque assay.
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PMID:Levels of C-type viral p30 antigens in lymphoma-resistant mice. 18 58

C3H/HeJ and AKR/J mice differed in their susceptibility to 3-methylcholantrhene (MCA)-induced sarcomagenesis (86% incidence of sarcomas in C3H by 18 wk; 5% incidence in AKR by 18 wk) and in the production of endogenous murine leukemia virus (MuLV) (AKR produced greater than 10(5) plaque-forming units/ml tail extract in XC test; C3H did not produce detectable virus.) A genetic corss between C3H and AKR mice was examined to determine the relationship of virus production to oncogenesis by MCA. Mice of the (C3H X AKR)F X C3H backcross were typed for the production of infectious MuLV by tail biospy and then inoculated with MCA. Of the backcross mice, 81% produced high titers of ecotropic MuLV; the remaining 19% did not contain detectable infectious MuLV. The virus-producing and non-virus-producing backcross mice were equally sensitive and highly susceptible to MCA-induced sarcomagenesis. Tumors of all virus-positive mice contained infectious MuLV. Some tumors (54%) of virus-negative mice also contained infectious MuLV; this indicated the induction of endogenous MuLV in the tumors of these mice. We concluded that the overt production of MuLV in mice of this backcross did not function in the sensitivity of the mice to sarcoma induction by MCA. Furthermore, the presence of virus in some chemically induced tumors was due to an induction pehnomenon independent of the primary oncogenic event.
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PMID:Endogenous oncornaviruses in chemically induced transformation. II. Effect of virus production in vivo. 18 3

A herpes-type virus that was originally isolated from a cell culture (designated K9V) derived from a tumor biopsy specimen from a patient with Kaposi's sarcoma was partially characterized. The host range of K9V, as determined by the induction of virus-specific cytopathology, synthesis of antigens, and plaque formation, was limited to human cells and particularly to fibroblasts. Immunofluorescence and complement fixation assays confirmed the specificity of the presence of cytomegalovirus (CMV)-type antigens in K9V-infected human fibroblasts. In addition, the density of K9V DNA was consistent with the density of CMV DNA. However, some peculiarities were observed in the K9V strain of CMV. The virus seemed more cell-associated in human fibroblasts than were known laboratory strains: The spread of cytopathology was slow and did not always involve the whole cell sheet, and the total regression of cytopathology with the establishment of a persistent infection was common. Similar characteristics have recently been observed in the Mj strain of CMV, which has been shown to be oncogenic in human fibroblasts.
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PMID:Partial characterization of a herpes-type virus (K9V) derived from Kaposi's sarcoma. 19 73

Mouse 3T6 cells were infected with polyoma virus at high multiplicity, and survivors were isolated. Clones from single cells were then established and were found to be resistant to a second infection. However, in some clones viral functions could at least be partially expressed during reinfection, as judged from a stimulation of nuclear tumor antigen expression. One such clone was studied in detail. These cells were transformed and produced low amounts of virus (less than 1 PFU per cell per generation). The persistent infection did not seem to be a carrier-state phenomenon, since infectious-center assays showed that most cells produced virus. The resistance of the cells to reinfection can be explained by interference from viral DNA present in the cells, averaging about 1,500 "free" copies per cell. This DNA had the normal physical characteristics of polyoma DNA. However, it had a slightly larger size than authentic polyoma DNA. Mapping with restriction endonucleases showed that the addition to the DNA was about 5% of the wild-type genome and was located close to the origin of DNA replication. This DNA was infectious, although it had a 10-fold lower infectivity than wild-type polyoma DNA. Both virus and DNA from the polyoma-resistant cells had a small-plaque morphology, as opposed to the large-plaque morphology of the virus used for the initial selection of cells.
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PMID:Multiple free viral DNA copies in polyoma virus-transformed mouse cells surviving productive infection. 19 83

Most humans in the United States have been infected with BK virus (BKV), a human papovavirus. Because BKV has oncogenic properties, we have investigated whether it may be a cause of human cancer. Basic principles of tumor virology imply that BKV-induced tumors should contain BKV DNA sequences. Therefore, we assayed (by molecular hybridization) DNA from human tumors and malignant cell lines for BKV DNA, using BKV [(32)P]DNA as probe. The BKV [(32)P]DNA was labeled in vitro (nick translation) to specific activities of 1 to 2 x 10(8) cpm/mug. The BKV DNA used to prepare our probes had the properties expected of authentic BKV genomes, including density of superhelical DNA, sedimentation velocity in alkaline and neutral sucrose gradients, production of one fragment by endonuclease EcoRI cleavage and four fragments by endonuclease Hin II + III cleavage and reassociation properties. From these studies we conclude that our BKV probes hybridized well, and represented bona fide BKV DNA. Using three different BKV [(32)P]DNA probes, i.e., from three distinct plaque isolates, we have analyzed DNA from BKV-transformed cells, normal human tissues, and a large number of human tumors. All human DNAs (cell lines, normal tissues, tumors) hybridized 5% with BKV DNA. Hybridization analysis of BKV-transformed hamster cell DNA indicated 5-6 copies of at least 88% of the BKV genome per cell. No BKV DNA sequences were detected (above the normal 5% hybridization to all human DNAs) in the following normal human tissues: 10 kidney (BKV is usually isolated from urine), 3 spleen, 13 lung, 23 colon, 2 rectum, 1 ileum, and 1 skin. No BKV-specific DNA was found in 166 tumors, including 5 carcinomas (Ca) of stomach, 3 Ca small intestine, 26 Ca colon, 9 Ca rectum, 31 Ca lung, 9 adenocarcinomas and 5 oat cell carcinomas of lung, 17 melanomas, 5 Ca prostate, 4 Ca bladder, 6 Wilms tumors, 4 hypernephromas, 15 Ca kidney, 7 brain tumors, 5 Hodgkin lymphomas, 10 lymphomas (immunosuppressed patients have a high incidence of lymphomas), 2 reticulum cell sarcomas (spleen), and 3 skin tumors. We have also analyzed 7 human malignant cell lines (melanoma, lung, rhabdomyosarcoma, and glioblastomas), including several clones of a lung melanoma line; no BKV DNA sequences were detected. Because our probes could detect one copy of BKV DNA if only 10% of the cells were tumor cells, our results are very strong evidence that the tumors we analyzed did not have a BKV etiology. The tumors we tested represent about 50% of all cancers in the United States; there is no evidence that BKV is involved in the etiology of these types of tumors.
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PMID:Analysis of human tumors and human malignant cell lines for BK virus-specific DNA sequences. 20 40

Two types of apparently spontaneous malignant alterations of fibroblastlike ST/a mouse lung cells (ST-L cells) grown in vitro are described. One type is characterized by a high tumorigenic potential of the altered cells in nonconditioned syngeneic recipients, a fibroblastlike morphology with cell surface showing very few microvilli by scanning electron-microscopy (SEM), and a growth pattern typical of nontransformed cells. These cells were described as R- cells. The other type is characterized bya low tumorigenic potential in non-conditioned, immunocompetent syngeneic recipients, rounding up of the cells which by SEM showed numerous microvilli on the surface, and a growth pattern typical of transformed cells. These cells were described as round cells or R+ cells. In immunoincompetent mice, R+ cells readily produced sarcomas, which grew faster than those produced by R- cells. Both types of ST-L cells expressed murine leukemia virus (MuLV) when tested in a peroxidase anti-p30 plaque test. The concentration of murine leukemia virus envelope glycoprotein (gp70) has previously (5) been shown to be threefold higher in R+ cells compared to R- cells. Furthermore, round-cell transformation was accompanied by the development of crossreacting rejection antigens protective against a secondary shallenge with Ehrlich ascites tumor and with syngeneic dimethylbenzanthracene induced ST/a mouse leukemia (STABAL). A similar protection was obtained by preimmunization with a cloned embryonic feral mouse cell line (SC-1) infected with ST-L virus as well as with virus-free SC-1 cells, suggesting the presence of rejection antigens both of viral (gp70) and nonviral origin.
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PMID:Comparative studies of two types of "spontaneous" malignant alteration of ST/A mouse lung fibroblasts propagated in vitro. 23 Jan 49


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