Abstract

In order to investigate a possible correlation between in vitro transformation and tumorigenicity in ovo, a new temperature-sensitive class T mutant of Rous Sarcoma Virus was isolated with a lower (39 degrees 5C) restrictive temperature for morphological transformation. This lower restrictive temperature was compatible with the survival of chicken and duck eggs for the tumorigenicity studies. In chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) infected by this new mutant, PA 17, and cultured at 39 degrees 5C, increase of hexose uptake, plasminogen activator production and anchorage-independent growth were only partially restricted, requiring incubation at 41 degrees 5C for a complete shut-off. Tumorigenicity in chicken and duck eggs inoculated with CEF infected and transformed by PA 17 was restricted at 39 degrees 5C, correlating well with the restriction of morphological transformation at this temperature. The kinase activity of the transforming protein pp60src in lysates of PA 17 infected cells cultured at permissive or restrictive temperatures was labile in RIPA buffer, as in the case of some previously examined ts T mutants. In the non-ionic detergent NP40 buffer, the kinase activity of PA17 infected cell lysates was better conserved and showed a moderate temperature dependence. These results suggest that, in spite of the correlations between the transformed cell phenotype in vitro and cell tumorigenicity in ovo, it is difficult to establish a quantitative relationship.

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