pubmed:abstractText |
Ten cell lines established from surgical specimens of human squamous carcinomas of the tongue and larynx have been investigated with respect to their motility, ultrastructure, karyotypes, certain biochemical features, interaction with normal epithelial and stromal elements and capacity to infiltrate three-dimensional organoid systems. All the cell lines have maintained several morphological and biochemical characteristics indicating a common origin, although the extent to which each line displays this heritage is variable. The phenotypes of each of the individual cell lines are, however, notably stable. Data are provided for epithelial surface markers (including epidermal growth factor, EGF) and for the synthesis and release of prostaglandins and proteases which may be involved in invasive mechanisms. Encounters between the cell lines and organoid substrata (embryonic chick heart spheroids, human amnion, chick chorioallantoic membrane) are described: the results indicate a scale of invasiveness ranging from lack of penetration to full-thickness infiltration by cells showing various distinctive growth patterns. Correlation between in vitro and in vivo findings is discussed, and it is suggested that the biological heterogeneity of the lines may reflect inherent properties of the original carcinoma cell populations which are more distinctly expressed in vitro.
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