Abstract

A sequential, quantitative loss of Peanut agglutinin (PNA) binding with progression of mouse mammary cells from normal to preneoplastic to neoplastic phenotypes was observed. Normal mammary epithelium, preneoplastic mammary lesions designated D2HAN (D2-type hyperplastic alveolar nodules) and a series of nine spontaneous tumours (D2ST1, D2ST2, D2ST3, D2ST4, D2A1, D2F2, D2.0R, D2.1, EMT6R08) derived from mice bearing D2HAN were grown in culture and analysed by flow cytometry with respect to PNA binding intensity to the cell surface. Primary cultures of normal mammary epithelium strongly bound PNA. A stepwise decrease in PNA binding by preneoplastic D2HAN cells and subsequent tumours arising from those hyperplastic lesions was observed. Three cloned tumour subpopulations derived from such tumours exhibited dramatic differences in PNA binding ranging from high (D2.0R) to low (D2.1) to very low (D2A1 cells). Their growth rate in vitro was similar. However, an inverse correlation between PNA binding and malignant characteristics, such as the incidence and latency of subcutaneous tumours and the efficiency of the tumour cells to form lung colonies after i.v. injection, existed. Cells subsequently derived from tumours resulting from injection of the D2.0R clone (high PNA binding, low tumorigenicity) were found to have diminished PNA binding properties and to be more tumorigenic when reimplanted into syngeneic mice. The difference in PNA binding (up to 50-fold) between normal mammary cells and other mouse mammary tumour cells, i.e., unrelated to D2HAN lesions, was also seen. These include six sister subpopulations derived from a single BALB/cfC3H mouse mammary tumour (lines: 67, 66c14, 168FARN, 4TO7, 68H, 64pT) as well as SP1 spontaneous CBA/J mouse mammary carcinoma. The difference was greatly reduced by neuraminidase treatment suggesting a masking of PNA binding sites by sialic acid. Separation of cell lysates by SDS-PAGE revealed a high molecular weight PNA binding glycoprotein (greater than 250 kd) expressed by normal mammary epithelium and preneoplastic D2HAN cells, but not by tumour cells regardless of neuraminidase treatment. A PNA reactive glycoprotein of approximately 90 kd was uniquely expressed in normal mammary epithelial lysates, although neuraminidase treatment exposed a similar band in a few tumour lines. Normal mammary epithelium, preneoplastic D2HAN cells, and the poorly tumorigenic clone D2.0R expressed a PNA binding glycoprotein of approximately 150 kd. This band appeared to be specifically sialylated during transition from the high PNA binding, low tumorigenic phenotype of D2.0R cells to the low PNA binding, highly tumorigenic phenotype of cells isolated from tumours resulting from s.c. implantation of D2.0R cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

Highlights

  • Polyclonal cell populations derived from new spontaneous D2 tumours arising from D2HAN-filled mammary fatpads were established and maintained as primary or low passage cultures (D2ST1, D2ST2, D2ST3, D2ST4 and D2ST5)

  • Each spontaneous D2 tumour arose in a separate animal except D2ST2 and D2ST3 which came from one animal bearing two tumours in D2HAN implanted fatpads on contralateral sides

  • Tumour cells were grown in DME supplemented with 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 5% calf serum (CS), 2 mM glutamine, 100 U ml-' penicillin, 100 jig ml-' streptomycin and

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Summary

Methods

The preneoplastic mammary hyperplastic alveolar nodule line D2HAN (Medina, 1973) was the source of several tumours (i.e., D2 tumours). Polyclonal cell populations derived from new spontaneous D2 tumours arising from D2HAN-filled mammary fatpads were established and maintained as primary or low passage cultures (D2ST1, D2ST2, D2ST3, D2ST4 and D2ST5). D2.OR is one of several clones derived from D2ST5 It was selected for further studies because of its high PNA binding capacity. The in vivo passage of D2.OR cells was performed in two more independent experiments each time yielding a low PNA binding population (clonal or polyclonal) which in one of those experiments was retested for tumorigenicity in syngeneic mice and was found similar to highly tumorigenic D2.1 clone

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