Movement of human mammary tumour cells in culture: Exclusion of fibroblasts by epithelial territories
- 15 March 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 21 (3) , 268-273
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.2910210304
Abstract
Time‐lapse cinematography was used to investigate the movement of confronting populations of human mammary epithelium and stromal cells (fibroblasts). Epithelial cell islands from fibro‐adenomas and from normal lacteal secretions completely excluded the fibroblasts, and individual cell territories were maintained even in dense cultures. Electron microscopy of the boundary between epithelium and fibroblasts showed that the two cell types made contact. In contrast, epithelial islands from two carcinomas did not retain territorial integrity and allowed penetration of mammary fibroblasts. Confronting homologous epithelial islands from benign tumours merged, but this was shown to be due to interdigitation rather than free mixing of cells. Epithelial cells moved actively but unlike fibroblasts they retained their neighbour relationships.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cultured human breast cancer cells lose selectivity in direct intercellular communicationNature, 1977
- Selective contact-dependent cell communicationNature, 1976
- CELLULAR INTERACTIONS IN MORPHOGENESIS OF EPITHELIAL MESENCHYMAL SYSTEMSThe Journal of cell biology, 1974