Establishment and characterization of three new continuous cell lines derived from human breast carcinomas.

Linda W. Engel(National Institutes of Health), Nathaniel A. Young(National Institutes of Health), Tommie Sue Tralka(National Institutes of Health), Marc E. Lippman, Stephen J. O’Brien(National Institutes of Health), Mary Jo Joyce(National Institutes of Health)
PubMed
October 1, 1978
Cited by 376Open Access
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Abstract

Three continuous lines of mammary tumor cells (ZR-75-1, ZR-75-27, and ZR-75-30) have been established from malignant effusions of two women with breast cancer. Differentiated properties expressed by each cell line include: (a) epithelial morphology (by light and electron microscopy) resembling that of the parental tumors; (b) presence of receptors for estrogen and other steroid hormones; and (c) growth responsiveness to estrogen and/or progesterone. All three cell lines possess human karyotypes that differ from one another in modal chromosome number as well as in characteristic marker chromosomes. Two of the cultures (ZR-75-27 and ZR-75-30), although derived from the same patient, have stable differences in their karyotypes.


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