Abstract

The locomotion of cloned mouse fibroblasts, non-neoplastic and their spontaneously transformed neoplastic derivatives was compared by means of cinephotomicrography. The spontaneous transformants grow as invasive transplantable sarcomas, whereas the non-neoplastic fail to grow as tumors, and do not show the diagnostic characteristics of neoplastic cells in culture; these include certain morphologic alterations, growth in soft agar, and susceptibility to killing by activated macrophages. The non-neoplastic cells tended to maintain the same direction of locomotion in sequential 2.5 h periods, whereas the neoplastic cells did not. Thus, cells in all non-neoplastic lines exhibited a “persisten” walk while cells from the neoplastic lines had a random pattern of locomotion. No relationship between cell density and randomness of locomotion was observed, and the non-neoplastic cells appeared to grow as rapidly as the neoplastic cells. However, the neoplastic cells had higher rates of locomotion possibly associated with their invasive potential in vivo. The deficient amount of lamellar cytoplasm in the neoplastic cells and the high migration rate may account for their random pattern of locomotion.

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