Intercellular propagation of individually programmed growth bursts in FRTL-5 cells. Implications for interpreting growth factor actions
Journal Article
·
· Endocrinology; (USA)
- Univ. Clinic of Internal Medicine, Inselspital, Berne (Switzerland)
Five methods are commonly used to quantify FRTL-5 cells' and other thyrocytes' growth in vitro and the impact of growth inhibiting or stimulating maneuvers: Total cell count, mitotic index, DNA measurement, total (3H)thymidine incorporation, and the fraction of (3H)thymidine labeled cells. All of them assess cell growth as though all cells were homogeneous with an identical response to growth factors. We demonstrate here that this assumption is not valid. Rather, some intrinsically growth-prone cells appear to pass a growth signal to neighboring cells so that variably sized colonies of synchronized cells within each cluster growing from monodispersed cells are formed. This is true for FRTL-5 cells growing in vitro in monolayers and in three-dimensional, collagen embedded spheroids. The pattern is the same when cell suspensions or collagen-embedded spheroids are implanted onto nude mice. Patches with alternating high and low growth become particularly prominent in the large tumor-like organoids grown from monodispersed cells in nude mice. The pattern much reminds of similar observations in growing intact thyroids. Since there is no significant correlation between the fraction of (3H)thymidine labeled cells and the size of two- or three-dimensional clusters in any experiment, growth of signal-spreading cells is assumed to occur in leaps and bounds. Growth velocity in each subclone of a cell population depends on the mean interval between bursts of replications and on the number of cells synchronized by cell-to-cell diffusion of the growth signal emanating from one dividing cell. Thus, growth-promoting and growth-inhibiting factors may not only act on the mean interval between successive growth bursts, but they may also change cell-to-cell spreading of growth signals.
- OSTI ID:
- 6324116
- Journal Information:
- Endocrinology; (USA), Journal Name: Endocrinology; (USA) Vol. 127:5; ISSN ENDOA; ISSN 0013-7227
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Thyrotropin dependent and independent thyroid cell lines selected from FRTL-5 derived tumors grown in nude mice
The interaction of signal transduction pathways in FRTL5 thyroid follicular cells: Studies with stable expression of beta 2-adrenergic receptors
Effects of transforming growth factor-beta on growth and differentiation of the continuous rat thyroid follicular cell line, FRTL-5
Journal Article
·
Sun Jul 01 00:00:00 EDT 1990
· Endocrinology; (USA)
·
OSTI ID:6640588
The interaction of signal transduction pathways in FRTL5 thyroid follicular cells: Studies with stable expression of beta 2-adrenergic receptors
Journal Article
·
Thu Feb 28 23:00:00 EST 1991
· Endocrinology; (USA)
·
OSTI ID:5924137
Effects of transforming growth factor-beta on growth and differentiation of the continuous rat thyroid follicular cell line, FRTL-5
Journal Article
·
Thu Sep 01 00:00:00 EDT 1988
· Endocrinology; (United States)
·
OSTI ID:6925366
Related Subjects
550301* -- Cytology-- Tracer Techniques
59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ANIMAL CELLS
ANIMALS
AUTORADIOGRAPHY
AZINES
BIOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS
BODY
CELL DIVISION
DISEASES
DNA
ENDOCRINE DISEASES
ENDOCRINE GLANDS
FUNCTIONS
GLANDS
GOITER
GROWTH FACTORS
HETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS
MAMMALS
MICE
MITOGENS
NUCLEIC ACIDS
NUCLEOSIDES
NUCLEOTIDES
ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
ORGANIC NITROGEN COMPOUNDS
ORGANS
PROTEINS
PYRIMIDINES
RIBOSIDES
RODENTS
THYMIDINE
THYROID
THYROID CELLS
TRITIUM COMPOUNDS
VERTEBRATES
59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ANIMAL CELLS
ANIMALS
AUTORADIOGRAPHY
AZINES
BIOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS
BODY
CELL DIVISION
DISEASES
DNA
ENDOCRINE DISEASES
ENDOCRINE GLANDS
FUNCTIONS
GLANDS
GOITER
GROWTH FACTORS
HETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS
MAMMALS
MICE
MITOGENS
NUCLEIC ACIDS
NUCLEOSIDES
NUCLEOTIDES
ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
ORGANIC NITROGEN COMPOUNDS
ORGANS
PROTEINS
PYRIMIDINES
RIBOSIDES
RODENTS
THYMIDINE
THYROID
THYROID CELLS
TRITIUM COMPOUNDS
VERTEBRATES