Summary Reference cultures derived from a transplantable rat mesothelioma were obtained by cloning cells three times in soft agar. Each line, designated "CARM-Lines", was selected on the basis of their epithelial or fibroblastic phenotype, and their uniform morphology.Three epithelial lines were used for more detailed in vitro studies comparing morphological and biological criteria at early and late passages. All three lines exhibited both epithelial and fibroblastic elements after 10-14 passages in vitro, demonstrating that the dimorphic histology of these tumours could be derived from a single aberrant cell. Morphology and growth characteristics of these cells were density-dependent. Anchorage dependent and independent clonogenic assays did not correlate. Anchorage dependent colony formation was the only parameter which differed markedly from the original parent line in the assays described.In vivo evidence of chondrogenesis and attempted ossification support the concept of a multipotential cell contributing to the diverse primary tumour morphology by cellular modulation or differentiation.
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