Abstract
SV40-transformed mouse macrophages, clonal line 28-12, and its subline, 28-12(Ara), were used to study morphological changes associated with their growth. Actively growing 28-12 cells were SV40 T-antigen-positive and had thick bundles of microfilaments, a few microtubules and immature nuclei. Stationary 28-12 cells had no SV40 T-antigen or a markedly reduced amount of it and possessed a network pattern of microfilaments similar to that of cultivated macrophages, many microtubules and mature nuclei. 28-12(Ara) cells had a low growth rate, a slightly reduced amount of SV40 T-antigen, a network pattern of microfilaments, significantly fewer microtubules and moderately mature nuclei. The high growth rate, which is possibly induced by viral products, apparently converts the microfilament distribution from a network to a bundle pattern, the microtubule assembly in the pseudopodia from large to small quantities and the nuclear profile from a mature to an immature one.
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