Abstract

Studies were made on the effect of cancer chemotherapeutic drugs on in vitro differentiation of a clone (R4) of mouse myeloid leukemic cells (MI) that is resistant to inducers. Treatment of the cells with 50% ascitic fluid (an inducer) plus 0.25 microgram/ml of adriamycin or 0.3 microgram/ml of daunomycin induced phagocytic activity and suppressed cell growth, but had little effect on cell viability; treatment with ascitic fluid or the drugs alone had no effect. In combination with ascitic fluid, mitomycin-C, hydroxyurea, 5-fluorouracil, or bleomycin also induced phagocytic activity, but 6-mercaptopurine, amethopterin, or aminopterin did not. These drugs also induced other differentiation-associated properties, lysozyme activity, and locomotive activity. The present results indicate that some cancer chemotherapeutic drugs sensitive resistant leukemic cells to an inducer of cell differentiation.

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