A transplantable tumour line (SS) was established in syngeneic rats from a spontaneous fibrosarcoma that had arisen in the submandibular salivary gland of a 24-month-old male F344 rat. A cell line (SS-P) was induced from SS, and a cloned cell line (SS-A3-1) was isolated from SS-P. The primary tumour consisted of oval to spindle-shaped cells arranged in bundles with abundant collagen fibres; ultrastructurally, neoplastic cells exhibited fusiform morphology with prominent rough endoplasmic reticulum. SS tumours showed marked interlacing fascicle and herring-bone growth patterns. SS-P and SS-A3-1 were similar morphologically to each other, consisting of oval, spindle or polygonal cells and occasional multinucleated giant cells. Tumours induced by SS-P and SS-A3-1 were histologically similar to SS tumours. Immunohistochemically, all cells in the primary tumour, SS tumours and tumours induced both by SS-P and SS-A3-1 and by SS-P and SS-A3-1 cultures gave a positive reaction to vimentin. Interestingly, neoplastic cells reacting to ED1 (rat macrophage/histiocyte-specific antibody) and alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) appeared in SS tumours and tumours induced by SS-P and SS-A3-1 and by SS-P and SS-A3-1 cultures. Cells with histiocytic fine structures and myofibroblastic cells with cytoplasmic actin-like microfilaments were also observed by electron microscopy. The present rat fibrosarcoma-derived transplantable tumour line (SS) and cell lines (SS-P and SS-A3-1) might express myofibroblastic and histiocytic phenotypes, probably depending on the surrounding conditions. These cell lines may prove useful for studying the mechanisms of phenotypic plasticity in neoplastic fibroblasts.
Renal tubular hyaline droplets developed in male and female F344 rats bearing a rat fibrosarcoma-derived transplantable tumor (SS). The droplets accumulated exclusively in the proximal renal tubular epithelia as eosinophilic granules of various sizes in hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections. The granules stained bright red with azan-Mallory stain. Immunohistochemically, the droplets were positive for lysozyme to various degrees but were negative for alpha 2u-globulin, albumin, and alpha 1-antitrypsin. These findings indicated the involvement of lysozyme, a low-molecular-weight protein, in the droplet formation. The morphological and immunohistochemical findings of the hyaline droplets bore a close resemblance to those reported in rats as a secondary lesion to spontaneous histiocytic sarcomas. Others have speculated that renal tubular hyaline droplets in histiocytic sarcoma-bearing rats are formed in lysosomes through cellular overload of lysozyme secreted excessively by the tumor cells. However, neoplastic cells of SS tumors were negative to lysozyme. The pathogenesis of renal hyaline droplets appearing in SS tumor-bearing rats remains to be investigated.
Angiogenesis, a biologic process whereby endothelial cells divide and migrate to form new blood vessels, is a key step in tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis. In the present study, we investigated the differences in angioarchitecture between two different tumors induced by cloned cell lines (MT-8 and MT-9), derived from a transplantable rat malignant fibrous histiocytoma, by scanning electron microscopy of vascular corrosion casts. During a 3-week observation period after implantation, the growth of MT-8 tumors appeared to be faster than that of MT-9 tumors. Histologically, MT-8 tumors were of the uniformly undifferentiated sarcoma type arranged in characteristic organoid structures, and MT-9 tumors showed a storiform growth pattern. In MT-8 tumors, neovascularization occurred by sprouting at postimplantation (PI) week 1, and the newly formed capillaries gradually became more tortuous. In MT-9 tumors, at PI week 1, the corrosion casts of newly formed capillaries mainly showed a wavy course but no finger-like outgrowths of capillaries were seen. At PI weeks 2 and 3, the sprouting was seen specifically in MT-9 tumors, forming basket-like structures and glomeruloid structures of capillaries. These results indicate that angiogenesis or angioarchitecture of MT-8 tumors is different from that of MT-9 tumors, depending on the differences in their tumor histology and by the features like absence or presence of basket-like structures and glomeruloid structures of capillaries.
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