SINGLE-STEP SELECTION OF UNIQUE HUMAN-MELANOMA VARIANTS DISPLAYING UNUSUALLY AGGRESSIVE METASTATIC BEHAVIOR IN NUDE ATHYMIC MICE
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 4, 31-43
Abstract
Using 2 different approaches, variants from a pigmented human melanoma cell line called MeWo were selected in a single step which displayed an unusually aggressive ability to metastasize in adult athymic nude mice. The 1st set of variants was obtained by recovery and establishment in culture, of spontaneous lung metastases obtained 5-6 mo. after s.c. inoculation of the parent MeWo line. That these metastases arose by a nonrandom process and were authenic variants, was shown by the fact that they were always highly aneuploid, having predominantly near-triploid or near-tetraploid chromosome numbers. In contrast, the parent MeWo cells had a predominant hypodioploid chromosome mode with a minor population (> 10%) of near-tetraploid cells. A 2nd set of variants was obtained through in vitro selection of cloned lectin-resistant (Lecr) aneuploid membrane mutants from MeWo, using wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) as the selective agent. Some of these mutants manifested an extraordinary ability to disseminate widely and extensively to many extrapulmonary sites after i.v. inoculation of the cells; furthermore, the metastases, even those < 0.5 mm in diameter (pinhead sized), were easily visible because of the remarkably intense pigmented nature of the mutant cells. These results provide a promising direction to take for the derivation of heterogenous sublines of human tumors which not only metastasize aggressively in nude mice, but which do so in a manner not unlike what is actually observed in their natural host.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Selection and In Vivo Properties of Lectin-Attachment Variants of Malignant Murine Lymphosarcoma Cell Lines2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1980