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Elsevier, Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 3(272), p. 887-894, 2000

DOI: 10.1006/bbrc.2000.2858

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Morphological Alteration of X-ray Induced Partially Transformed Human Cells by Transfection with a Small c-myc DNA Sequence

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

During attempts to transform a normal human fibroblast strain (GM730) by X-irradiation, we obtained a partially transformed cell strain (GM730pt) which demonstrates several aspects of the transformed phenotype including morphological changes, increased saturation density, growth in soft agar, and focus formation in long-term cultures. When GM730pt cells were transfected with the feline c-myc gene, morphology of the cells changed dramatically following seven days of expression. Transfection of other plasmid DNAs or oncogenes such as pUC8, pSV2neo, src, sis, and H-ras had little or no effects on the phenotype of GM730pt cells. On the other hand, a gel purified, small fragment of c-myc DNA had a complete cell alteration activity. Furthermore, Bal 31 deletion and M13 sequencing experiments showed that the alteration seen in GM730pt cells is delimited to a 24 nucleotide stretch (active myc element) from the second intron of the feline c-myc gene that contains a T-rich sequence.