Laminin provides a better substrate than fibronectin for attachment, growth, and differentiation of 1003 embryonal carcinoma cells
- PMID: 7166333
- DOI: 10.1007/BF02796374
Laminin provides a better substrate than fibronectin for attachment, growth, and differentiation of 1003 embryonal carcinoma cells
Abstract
Culture of cells in hormonally defined media has allowed (a) the demonstration of physiological responses from cells usually unable to express them in vitro and (b) the study of the effects on growth and differentiation of diffusible factors and attachment factors. The embryonal carcinoma line 1003 forms multidifferentiated tumors in vivo but is unable to differentiate in vitro when grown in serum-containing medium. In a defined medium containing insulin, transferrin, selenium, and fibronectin as attachment factors, 1003 cells grow for several generations and differentiate into neurons and embryonic mesenchyme (Darmon et al., 1981, Dev. Biol. 85: 463-473). In the present work the effects of fibronectin and laminin were compared. In the presence of laminin the cells attached and spread better, grew faster, and could be plated at lower densities. Neurite extension was also better under these conditions and most importantly, it was found that laminin induced an important formation of muscular tissue when the cells had been seeded at low densities. Multinucleated myotubes could be stained with antibodies directed against embryonic muscular myosin. Coating the dishes with polylysine or adding FGF or serum-spreading factor to the medium allowed growth of low-density cultures with fibronectin instead of laminin but muscular differentiation was not detected under these conditions. Addition of fibronectin to laminin-containing medium did not inhibit muscular differentiation.
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