Coordinate changes in neuronal phenotype and surface antigen expression in human neuroblastoma cell variants
- PMID: 3028608
Coordinate changes in neuronal phenotype and surface antigen expression in human neuroblastoma cell variants
Abstract
Human neuroblastoma cells growing in culture offer a unique opportunity to study proliferating human cells with a neuronal phenotype. We have previously identified several neuroblastoma cell lines which show spontaneous conversion (N/S interconversion) between two morphologically distinct cell types: neuroblastic (N-type) cells and variant, substrate-adherent (S-type) cells resembling cultured glial or mesenchymal cells. In the present study, we have used molecular markers to confirm the neuronal phenotype of N-type cells and to demonstrate that S-type cells have a nonneuronal phenotype. Furthermore, we have used these markers, including a series of cell surface differentiation antigens, to compare S-type neuroblastoma cells with a wide range of cultured epithelial, mesenchymal, and neuroectodermal cells. The results suggest that N/S interconversion represents an ordered transition between two neuroectodermal differentiation programs rather than random phenotypic instability of cultured cells; S-type variant cells show a molecular phenotype most closely resembling the phenotype of cultured ectomesenchymal cells; and in vitro variant formation of human neuroblastomas may provide an experimental model for the observed in vivo transition of some malignant neuroblastomas into benign ganglioneuromas.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous