Establishment of Two Canine Sarcoma Cell Lines: Productive Infection With Feline Leukemia Virus2

1981 ◽  
Vol 154 (3) ◽  
pp. 594-608 ◽  
Author(s):  
T M Dexter ◽  
T D Allen ◽  
N G Testa ◽  
E Scolnick

In long-term marrow cultures, hemopoiesis can be maintained for several months, although erythropoiesis is normally suppressed at the most primitive level of development (the erythroid colony-forming cells). Infection of these cultures with a viral complex combining helper-independent murine leukemia virus (F-MuLV) and a spleen focus-forming virus (SFFVp) results in a productive infection of both the replication defective SFFVp and the F-MuLV. After infection, the cultures show a dramatic elevation in the numbers of late erythroid progenitor cells (CFU-E), many of which will grow in the absence of added erythropoietin, and a transient erythropoietin, independent erythropoiesis, including the production of mature, enucleated erythrocytes. Hemopoiesis eventually declines, with no evidence for the generation of Friend tumor cells. When erythropoiesis is induced in the long-term cultures by addition of anemic mouse serum before infection by polycythemia-inducing Friend virus, the generation of erythropoietin-independent CFU-E and erythrocyte formation is followed by the sustained production (greater than 40 wk) of primitive erythroid cells with low spontaneous levels (less than 5%) of hemoglobinization. Although these cells will produce spleen colonies in irradiated mice and can be cloned in soft-gel media, they do not produce autonomous, permanently growing cell lines in vitro, i.e., they retain a dependency upon the marrow-adherent layer for their continued growth. However, following a further passage on a "virgin" marrow environment, permanent cell lines can be established that are able to grow independently of environmental influences. Thus, this system is the first description of a complete in vitro system for the reproducible production and isolation of Friend virus-induced erythroid cell lines.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 80 (10) ◽  
pp. 2650-2655
Author(s):  
P Constantoulakis ◽  
M Walmsley ◽  
R Patient ◽  
T Papayannopoulou ◽  
T Enver ◽  
...  

Established cell lines were screened for secretion of activities than can stimulate fetal hemoglobin (HbF) production in adult burst-forming unit-erythroid (BFUe) cultures. Conditioned media from four cell lines, a human teratocarcinoma, an osteosarcoma, a bladder cell carcinoma, and feline leukemia virus (FeLV) A-infected feline fibroblasts (FEF-A cells), consistently increased the relative production of fetal globin in BFUe-derived colonies. In vitro translation of RNA from these cells in Xenopus oocytes yielded products that increased the gamma to gamma+beta ratio in adult erythroid colonies. These results demonstrate that a variety of cell lines produce factors that stimulate the production of HbF in vitro. The genes of such factors could be isolated by expression cloning of cDNA from cell lines using the Xenopus oocyte system.


2003 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara J. Winslow ◽  
Mark D. Cochran ◽  
Andreas Holzenburg ◽  
Jingchuan Sun ◽  
David E. Junker ◽  
...  

1979 ◽  
Vol 150 (2) ◽  
pp. 392-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Huebner ◽  
N Tsuchida ◽  
C Green ◽  
C M Croce

Murine teratocarcinoma stem cells are nonpermissive for productive infection by a variety of DNA (polyoma and SV40 virus) and RNA (murine leukemia and sarcoma virus) tumor viruses whereas differentiated murine cells derived from the stem cells are permissive for productive (or abortive in the case of SV40) infection by these same viruses. The block to productive infection by these oncogenic viruses is at a postpenetration step in the replication cycle of these viruses but the precise level of the block has not been established for any of these viruses. In this report we describe teratocarcinoma-derived stem and differentiated cell lines which should be especially useful in determining the level of the block to replication of ecotropic murine leukemia virus in murine teratocarcinoma stem cells. The stem cell line, OTT6050AF1 BrdU, which is completely nonpermissive to productive infection by Moloney murine leukemia virus and consists of 97% pluripotent stem cells, contains DNA copies of an RNA tumor virus which is indistinguishable from the N-tropic murine leukemia virus of AKR mice. The stem cells are negative for expression of viral reverse transcriptase, p30 and gp69/71 and no virus is found by XC plaque assay or other biological tests. Differentiated cells established from the same teratocarcinoma tumor are 100% positive for viral gp69/71, p30, and produce large amounts of reverse transcriptase activity and N-tropic virus as detected by biological assay. The virus isolated from the differentiated cells is closely related, if not identical to AKR N-tropic virus by nucleic acid hybridization studies and is thus not an endogenous virus of the 129 strain of mice. The teratocarcinoma tumor from which the cell lines were established had been carried in 129 mice and perhaps at some time in the mouse passage history the tumors were infected (nonproductively) with the N-tropic virus. Regardless of the origin of this viral DNA, the OTT6050A derived stem and differentiated cell lines should be extremely useful in defining in stem cells the step at which ecotropic murine leukemia virus replication is blocked.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 80 (10) ◽  
pp. 2650-2655 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Constantoulakis ◽  
M Walmsley ◽  
R Patient ◽  
T Papayannopoulou ◽  
T Enver ◽  
...  

Abstract Established cell lines were screened for secretion of activities than can stimulate fetal hemoglobin (HbF) production in adult burst-forming unit-erythroid (BFUe) cultures. Conditioned media from four cell lines, a human teratocarcinoma, an osteosarcoma, a bladder cell carcinoma, and feline leukemia virus (FeLV) A-infected feline fibroblasts (FEF-A cells), consistently increased the relative production of fetal globin in BFUe-derived colonies. In vitro translation of RNA from these cells in Xenopus oocytes yielded products that increased the gamma to gamma+beta ratio in adult erythroid colonies. These results demonstrate that a variety of cell lines produce factors that stimulate the production of HbF in vitro. The genes of such factors could be isolated by expression cloning of cDNA from cell lines using the Xenopus oocyte system.


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (2) ◽  
pp. 1059-1068 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Hanlon ◽  
N. I. Barr ◽  
K. Blyth ◽  
M. Stewart ◽  
P. Haviernik ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The c-myb oncogene is a frequent target for retroviral activation in hemopoietic tumors of avian and mammalian species. While insertions can target the gene directly, numerous clusters of retroviral insertion sites have been identified which map close to c-myb and outside the transcription unit in T-lymphomas (Ahi-1, fit-1, and Mis-2) and monocytic and myeloid leukemias (Mml1, Mml2, Mml3, and Epi-1). Previous analyses showed no consistent effect of these insertions on c-myb expression, raising the possibility that other nearby genes were the true targets. In contrast, our analysis of four cell lines established from lymphomas bearing insertions at fit-1 (fti-1) (feline leukemia virus) and Ahi-1 (Moloney murine leukemia virus) shows that these display higher expression levels of c-myb RNA and protein compared to a panel of phenotypically similar cell lines lacking such insertions. An interesting feature of the cell lines with long-range c-myb insertions was that each also carried an activated Myc allele. The potential for oncogenic synergy between Myb and Myc in T-cell lymphoma was confirmed in transgenic mice overexpressing alleles of both genes in the T-cell compartment, lending further credence to the case for c-myb as the major target for long-range activation. In contrast, mapping and analysis of c-myb neighboring genes (HBS1 and FLJ20069) showed that the expression of these genes did not correlate well with the presence of proviral insertions. A possible explanation for the paradoxical behavior of c-myb was provided by one of the murine T-lymphoma lines bearing an insertion at Ahi-1 (p/m16i) that reproducibly down-regulated c-myb RNA and protein to very low levels or undetectable levels on prolonged culture. Our observations implicate c-myb as a key target of upstream and downstream retroviral insertions. However, overexpression may become dispensable during outgrowth in vitro, and perhaps during tumor progression in vivo, providing a potential rationale for the previously observed discordance between retroviral insertion and c-myb expression levels.


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