Chromosome balance and the control of malignancy
β Scribed by Navah Bloch-Shtacher; Leo Sachs
- Book ID
- 102884382
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 708 KB
- Volume
- 87
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The Giemsa banding pattern of the chromosomes has been analyzed in a line of transformed golden hamster cells, revertant and re-revertant cells and their tumors. The transformed and re-revertant cells were malignant in vivo and had gained an additional chromosome 5(7). Revertants with a suppression of malignancy lost this additional chromosome 5(7) and gained an additional chromosome 7(2). The tumors produced by segregants from the revertant cells were malignant, although to a lower degree than transformed and re-revertant cells. These tumors had lost the additional chromosome 7(2) found in revertants and gained one or two 5(12) chromosomes. The results support the hypothesis that the balance between genes for expression and suppression controls malignancy. The data indicate that chromosome 7(2) carries genes for suppression and that chromosomes 5(7) and 5(12) carry genes for expression of malignancy. The genes on chromosome 5(7) seem to result in a greater degree of expression than the genes on chromosome 5(12). The chromosome balance that controlled malignancy in these cells, also controlled the expression and suppression of transformed properties in vitro.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract A chromosome that controls malignancy in Chinese hamster cells has been identified by analysis of the Giemsa banding pattern of a malignant cell line transformed by simian virus 40 (SV40), nonβmalignant revertants from this line, segregants from the revertants that were again malignant