Abstract

Three related mouse mammary cell lines were cultured in collagen gels and assayed for growth factor responsiveness and interaction via soluble factors. The CL-S1 cell line is nontumorigenic and grows poorly in collagen gel culture. The +SA and -SA cell lines exhibit different degrees of malignant behavior in vivo and have different growth properties in vitro. In collagen gel culture, +SA growth was stimulated by serum but not by epidermal growth factor (EGF), whereas both serum and EGF were required for optimal growth of -SA cells of early passage number as well as CL-S1 cells. -SA cells of later passage repeatedly exhibited a change so as to no longer require serum while retaining EGF responsiveness. [125I]EGF binding analyses indicated that CL-S1 cells bound EGF with less affinity than did -SA cells whereas +SA cells bound almost no ligand. When cell lines were maintained in separate collagen gels but shared the same culture medium, growth of +SA or -SA cells was slightly enhanced in the presence of CL-S1 cells and -SA cell growth was enhanced by the presence of +SA cells. Using the normal rat kidney fibroblast line NRK (clone 49F) as an indicator, serum-containing conditioned media from each cell line and from each pair of cell lines cultured in collagen gels were tested for transforming growth factor (TGF) activity. Both the -SA and CL-S1 lines tested positive for TGF-alpha production and possibly released a TGF-beta activity. These results suggest mechanisms by which cell populations in and around tumors can modify one another's growth characteristics.

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