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DOI: 10.1016/0092-8674(84)90012-6
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Fibroblast lines expressing activated c-myc oncogenes are tumorigenic in nude mice and syngeneic animals

Elizabeth J. Keath,Perry G. Caimi,Michael Cole

Transfection
Biology
Molecular biology
1984
The influence of c-myc expression on fibroblast growth and morphology was investigated by transfection of c-myc genes linked to viral promoters. No foci were observed after transfection of either NIH/3T3 or Rat 2 cells. Cell lines containing activated c-myc genes were established using SV2-neo coselection and several growth parameters of the cells were studied. The cells showed a slight increase in refractility and formed colonies in soft agar with an efficiency of only 1%-2%. The c-myc-transfected cells grew well in 0.5% serum while the controls did not. The major difference in cell growth noted was that c-myc-transfected cells were tumorigenic when inoculated into nude mice or syngeneic rats. Analysis of RNA from the tumorigenic cells showed a level of c-myc expression from the transfected genes that was 2 to 6 fold higher than that from the endogenous gene. The level of c-myc RNA in the fibroblast tumors was similar to that found in mouse plasmacytomas. Expression of the endogenous c-myc gene was unaffected by the transfected genes for subconfluent cells in culture, but the gene was shut off in the nude mouse tumors. These results demonstrate that constitutive c-myc expression leads to tumorigenicity in immortalized cell lines.
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    Fibroblast lines expressing activated c-myc oncogenes are tumorigenic in nude mice and syngeneic animals” is a paper by Elizabeth J. Keath Perry G. Caimi Michael Cole published in 1984. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.