Abstract

The epithelial HBL-100 cell line was established in vitro from milk of an apparently healthy woman [2, 3]. It exhibits characteristics of transformation from the very beginning and evolves during in vitro maintenance, until becoming tumorigenic in nude mice. This immortal cell line represents a useful model for studying the progression of human epithelial cells toward malignancy. In the course of our investigations we detected a 94K protein in HBL-100 cells obtained from four different sources. This protein is shown to be indistinguishable from the SV40 large T-antigen on the basis of: 1. 1, Recognition by polyclonal and different monoclonal antibodies. 2. 2, Partial peptide map analysis. 3. 3, Specific binding capacity to the SV40 DNA origin of replication. The presence of a tandemly integrated SV40 genome is demonstrated by Southern blotting. Successful rescue of SV40 DNA by fusion with permissive COS-7, but not CV-1 cells, indicates that the SV40 T-antigen from HBL-100 cells is defective in a function(s) essential to the replication of the viral DNA. The possible origin of the SV40 genetic information that we have detected in HBL-100 cells and the implications of this finding on studies involving this cell line are discussed.

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