Abstract

A new cell line, Yumoto, derived from a squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix, was established from serially transplanted tumor tissues in nude mice. Monolayer cultured cells were polygonal and formed pavement-like sheet. They showed a piling-up tendency and were devoid of contact inhibition. Electron micrographs demonstrated the presence of microvilli on the cell surface, abundant tonofilaments in the cytoplasm, and the connection with desmosomes. These electron micrographical characteristics of Yumoto cells were consistent with those of squamous cell origin. Yumoto cells were highly tumorigenic in BALB/c nude mice and produced a well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of keratinizing type which closely resembled to the original tumor tissues in nude mice. The presence of HPV DNA was examined using polymerase chain reaction and Southern blot analysis, but no known types of HPV DNA could be detected. Exons 2 through 11 of the p53 gene were analyzed by direct DNA sequencing, revealing a homozygous mutation at codon 281 in exon 8, GAC to CAC (Asp→His). Furthermore, physical p53-gene deletion was demonstrated by dual-color fluorescencein situhybridization. This cell line is useful for studying the carcinogenesis of cervical carcinoma and for investigating the biological characteristics of a HPV-negative and mutated p53 squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix.

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