An abnormality of cell behaviour in human dystrophic muscle cultures: A time-lapse study

Abstract
The initiation of monolayer mass cell cultures from adult human biopsies has revealed a striking abnormality in the growth and development pattern of muscle cultures from Duchenne-type dystrophy. This abnormality in cell behaviour was seen as early as 4 days in culture, well before myotube formation or confluence, and consisted of areas where cells clustered together in a multilayered mass rather than showing the typical monolayer distribution normally observed. To gain some insight into the mechanism of cell cluster development, we have examined such a culture by time-lapse cinematography and also the cell behaviour of other control cultures. The results of this study show that the clusters enlarged primarily by cell division and, to a lesser extent, by the acquisition of neighbouring cells. Furthermore, none of the single cells surrounding the clusters exhibited contact inhibition of movement. This behaviour was not observed in the other cultures examined. These findings could be indicative of an abnormality in the cell surface or cell-locomotory machinery of dystrophic cells.