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Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.

Two independent lines of experimental evidence are presented in support of the hypothesis that senescence is a normal mechanism of tumor suppression, a homeostatic device designed through evolution to limit cell proliferation irreversibly and thereby to protect the organism against cancer. One set o...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Sager, R
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1991
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1663451
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author Sager, R
author_facet Sager, R
author_sort Sager, R
collection PubMed
description Two independent lines of experimental evidence are presented in support of the hypothesis that senescence is a normal mechanism of tumor suppression, a homeostatic device designed through evolution to limit cell proliferation irreversibly and thereby to protect the organism against cancer. One set of experiments uses normal human foreskin fibroblasts, transfected at early passage with SV40 DNA and subsequently infected with the K-ras virus. If the cells are immortal prior to infection, they become tumorigenic and make large tumors in nude mice, whereas if they are not immortal, though expressing SV40 T-antigen, they make tiny tumors that senesce in the test mouse after as many doublings as similar cells make in culture. This result demonstrates that immortalization is essential for progressive tumor growth in vivo. The second set of experiments demonstrate that normal human mammary epithelial cells can be immortalized by transfection with viral DNA from human papilloma virus 16 or 18, although these viruses have not been associated with breast cancer. The effective immortalization and other premalignant changes induced by human papilloma virus transfection are accompanied by chromosome changes that may contribute to the partially transformed phenotypes. None of the cloned or pooled transfectants have been tumorigenic in the nude mouse assay. Here, too, immortalization is experimentally separable from tumor-forming ability.
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spelling pubmed-15680482006-09-18 Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression. Sager, R Environ Health Perspect Research Article Two independent lines of experimental evidence are presented in support of the hypothesis that senescence is a normal mechanism of tumor suppression, a homeostatic device designed through evolution to limit cell proliferation irreversibly and thereby to protect the organism against cancer. One set of experiments uses normal human foreskin fibroblasts, transfected at early passage with SV40 DNA and subsequently infected with the K-ras virus. If the cells are immortal prior to infection, they become tumorigenic and make large tumors in nude mice, whereas if they are not immortal, though expressing SV40 T-antigen, they make tiny tumors that senesce in the test mouse after as many doublings as similar cells make in culture. This result demonstrates that immortalization is essential for progressive tumor growth in vivo. The second set of experiments demonstrate that normal human mammary epithelial cells can be immortalized by transfection with viral DNA from human papilloma virus 16 or 18, although these viruses have not been associated with breast cancer. The effective immortalization and other premalignant changes induced by human papilloma virus transfection are accompanied by chromosome changes that may contribute to the partially transformed phenotypes. None of the cloned or pooled transfectants have been tumorigenic in the nude mouse assay. Here, too, immortalization is experimentally separable from tumor-forming ability. 1991-06 /pmc/articles/PMC1568048/ /pubmed/1663451 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Sager, R
Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.
title Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.
title_full Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.
title_fullStr Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.
title_full_unstemmed Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.
title_short Senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.
title_sort senescence as a mode of tumor suppression.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1663451
work_keys_str_mv AT sagerr senescenceasamodeoftumorsuppression