| Literature DB >> 194826 |
R Schultz, P Ruiz, M Chirigos, U Heine, W Nelson-Rees.
Abstract
The Madison lung (M109) tumor cell line, initiated from a "spontaneous", anaplastic murine lung carcinoma, has been propagated continuously in vitro for more than 300 cell generations. Cytogenetic analysis revealed a mouse karyotype with a mode of 78 chromosomes (2n = 40). Three distinct marker chromosomes were identified by trypsin-giemsa banding. The cells piled up in culture and had a short generation time and high plating efficiency. Electron microscopy revealed highly undifferentiated cells with little rough endoplasmic reticulum, an abundance of free polysomes, the presence of few and often odd-shaped mitochondria, lipid bodies and phagocytic vacuoles. Virus particles of the C-type were found frequently. The subcutaneous transplantation of M109 cultured cells at a relatively low cell inoculum produced highly metastatic tumors in syngeneic BALG/c mice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1977 PMID: 194826 DOI: 10.1007/bf02615079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: In Vitro ISSN: 0073-5655