Articles

Factors affecting the frequency of transformation of rat embryo cells by simian virus 40

Risser, Rex; Pollack, Robert

The transformation of primary rat cells into established cell lines by simian virus 40 has been monitored using the different restrictive assays of colony formation in sparse culture, dense colony or focus formation on a confluent cell sheet, and colony formation in semisolid medium. Primary embryonic rat cell cultures are considerably less susceptible to infection and subsequent transformation than the established mouse 3T3 cell line or later in vitro passages of rat cells. These embryonic cells show a stage-specific susceptibility to transformation but not to infection with a maximum susceptibility achieved at the 15th to 16th days of gestation. All transformed cell lines derived by SV40 infection of primary rat cells express viral T antigen as detected by immunofluoresence, though they differ greatly in their plating efficiency in semisolid medium containing methylcellulose. Only the assay of colony formation in semisolid medium selects directly for transformants which plate well in that medium while all assays appear to select for cell lines containing viral T antigen.

Files

  • thumnail for Risser and Pollack - 1979 - Factors affecting the frequency of transformation .pdf Risser and Pollack - 1979 - Factors affecting the frequency of transformation .pdf application/pdf 448 KB Download File

More About This Work

Academic Units
Biological Sciences
Published Here
September 13, 2024