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Growth of diploid cells from breast cancers
Authors:S R Wolman  H S Smith  M Stampfer  A J Hackett
Affiliation:1. Cytogenetics Laboratory, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY USA.;2. Peralta Cancer Research Institute, Oakland, CA USA.;3. Department of Biology and Medicine, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Abstract:Cell cultures were derived from normal and cancerous breast tissues and from metastases by methods that selected for relatively adherent epithelial aggregates. Karyotypic analyses of first or second passage cultures yielded predominantly normal diploid cells. Nonclonal aberrations were more common in tumor-derived than in normal cultures. Three of the cultures that originated from metastases were characterized by abnormal clones. These results support observations based on DNA content, which indicate that a considerable fraction of breast cancers are composed predominantly of diploid cells. They differ greatly from chromosomal findings in long-term cultures of tumor effusions and thus emphasize the karyotypic diversity that can be found in tumors from a single tissue of origin--the breast.
Keywords:Address requests for reprints to Dr. Sandra R. Wolman   Cytogenetics Laboratory   New York University Medical Center   550 First Ave.   New York   NY 10016.
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