• 1 January 1977
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 37  (3) , 857-864
Abstract
Three lines of mouse mammary carcinoma growing in isogenic hosts and differing in degree of histological differentiation and rates of proliferation were used to study parenchymal cells with various types of nucleoli. The relative number of cells possessing trabeculate or ring shaped nucleoli or nucleolar fragments was related to the growth rate and degree of differentiation of tumor lines tested. All 3 subpopulations increased with increasing age and decelerated tumor growth. In some cells in late telophase, trabeculate or ring shaped nucleoli could be distinguished in mitotic poles. This demonstrated that cells with these nucleoli are detected at the beginning of the G1 phase. Even low levels of DNA synthesis, which would indicate that some cells with trabeculate or ring shaped nucleoli or possessing nucleolar fragments were in the S phase, could not be demonstrated. Microfluorometric measurements indicated that cells with trabeculate and ring shaped nucleoli have a DNA content close to 2c; cells with dense nucleoli have a DNA content corresponding to 2c, 2-4c, 4c or > 4c. Cells with trabeculate and ring shaped nucleoli and cells with nucleolar fragments proceed slowly through G1 or are arrested in this phase. Cells with trabeculate nucleoli were replaced steadily, having a transit time of no longer than 84 h. These cells constituted a fast component of cell renewal of G1-confined cells. A slow component, cells bearing ring shaped nucleoli or nucleolar fragments, were replaced after a lag of 24-48 h, with residency time for some of these cells being in excess of 84 h.

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