Literature DB >> 317080

Infiltration and survival: the behaviour of normal, invasive cells implanted to the developing chick wing.

C Tickle, A Crawley.   

Abstract

The invasiveness of mouse lymphocytes and thymocytes, rabbit peritoneal neutrophil granulocytes (PMNs), mouse peritoneal macrophages (both activated and non-activated) and pig endothelial cells was assayed by implanting these cells to the chick wing bud. Cells of each type moved into the wing mesenchyme, although activated macrophages invaded poorly. PMNs were the most invasive cells and had moved well into the limb after only a few hours. PMNs, lymphocytes and thymocytes were ingested by wing mesenchyme cells. Endothelial cells, however, ingested chick blood cells. The implanted cells showed differences in ability to survive in the limb: PMNs disappeared rapidly, lymphocytes and thymocytes sometimes persisted for 24 h, while grafts of macrophages and endothelial cells were present at 24 h. Mechanisms which might be involved in the invasiveness of these cells, and also in their different abilities to survive in the chick wing, are discussed with particular reference to the production of plasminogen activator.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 317080     DOI: 10.1242/jcs.40.1.257

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Sci        ISSN: 0021-9533            Impact factor:   5.285


  1 in total

1.  Development of a high-throughput three-dimensional invasion assay for anti-cancer drug discovery.

Authors:  Nikki A Evensen; Jian Li; Jie Yang; Xiaojun Yu; Nicole S Sampson; Stanley Zucker; Jian Cao
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-11       Impact factor: 3.240

  1 in total

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