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Effects of human lymphoblastoid interferon on cultured breast cancer cells

✍ Scribed by Hideo Shibata; Joyce Taylor-Papadimitriou


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1981
Tongue
French
Weight
654 KB
Volume
28
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The effect of human interferon on growth and fibronectin production in a range of cultured breast cancer cell lines has been investigated. The cell lines differ in their sensitivity to interferon's growth‐inhibitory effect as determined from growth curves, but the degree of sensitivity varies according to the method of assay. When growth was measured in cultures seeded with fairly large numbers of cells, five out of seven lines examined showed a reduction of 50% or more in the number of attached cells after treatment for 8 days with 1,000 units/ml of interferon. Growth of the two cell lines least affected by interferon treatment in dense culture could, however, be markedly inhibited under conditions of clonal growth in agar or when sparsely seeded on plastic and this was due to inhibition of initiation of growth. In some breast epithelial lines, where the number of attached cells was regulated in part by cell shedding, it was found that interferon not only inhibited cell proliferation, but also increased cell shedding. To determine if interferon increased cell shedding by affecting fibronectin production, the total and cell associated fibronectin was estimated in control and interferon‐treated cultures. Four of 10 cell lines examined produced detectable amounts of fibronectin, and in only one of these lines, Hs578T derived from a carcino‐sarcoma, was the production and retention of fibronectin inhibited by interferon treatment. In those breast carcinoma lines which produced detectable amounts of fibronectin, the level of production and retention of the protein, expressed as a proportion of the total protein, did not change after interferon treatment, but showed an increase if expressed on a per cell basis. This is explained by the fact that the interferon‐treated cells showed an increase in cell volume.


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