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Cellular characteristics of primary and immortal canine embryonic fibroblast cells
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  • Open access
  • Published: 01 August 2004

Cellular characteristics of primary and immortal canine embryonic fibroblast cells

  • Seungkwon You1,
  • Jai-Hee Moon,
  • Tae-Kyung Kim,
  • Sung-Chan Kim,
  • Jai-Woo Kim,
  • Du-Hak Yoon,
  • Sungwook Kwak,
  • Ki-Chang Hong,
  • Yun-Jaie Choi &
  • …
  • Hyunggee Kim 

Experimental & Molecular Medicine volume 36, pages 325–335 (2004)Cite this article

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Abstract

Using normal canine embryonic fibroblasts (CaEF) that were shown to be senescent at passages 7th-9th, we established two spontaneously immortalized CaEF cell lines (designated CGFR-Ca-1 and -2) from normal senescent CaEF cells, and an immortal CaEF cell line by exogenous introduction of a catalytic telomerase subunit (designated CGFR-Ca-3). Immortal CGFR- Ca-1, -2 and -3 cell lines grew faster than primary CaEF counterpart in the presence of either 0.1% or 10% FBS. Cell cycle analysis demonstrated that all three immortal CaEF cell lines contained a significantly high proportion of S-phase cells compared to primary CaEF cells. CGFR-Ca-1 and -3 cell lines showed a loss of p53 mRNA and protein expression leading to inactivation of p53 regulatory function, while the CGFR-Ca-2 cell line was found to have the inactive mutant p53. Unlike the CGFR-Ca-3 cell line that down-regulated p16INK4a mRNA due to its promoter methylation but had an intact p16INK4a regulatory function, CGFR-Ca-1 and -2 cell lines expressed p16INK4a mRNA but had a functionally inactive p16INK4a regulatory pathway as judged by the lack of obvious differences in cell growth and phenotype when reconstituted with wild-type p16INK4a. All CGFR-Ca-1, -2 and -3 cell lines were shown to be untransformed but immortal as determined by anchorage-dependent assay, while these cell lines were fully transformed when overexpressed oncogenic H-rasG12V. Taken together, similar to the nature of murine embryo fibroblasts, the present study suggests that normal primary CaEF cells have relatively short in vitro lifespans and should be spontaneously immortalized at high frequency.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. The Laboratory of Cell Growth and Function Regulation, Korea

    Seungkwon You

Authors
  1. Seungkwon You
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  2. Jai-Hee Moon
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  3. Tae-Kyung Kim
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  4. Sung-Chan Kim
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  5. Jai-Woo Kim
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  6. Du-Hak Yoon
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  7. Sungwook Kwak
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  8. Ki-Chang Hong
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  9. Yun-Jaie Choi
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  10. Hyunggee Kim
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This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Cite this article

You, S., Moon, JH., Kim, TK. et al. Cellular characteristics of primary and immortal canine embryonic fibroblast cells. Exp Mol Med 36, 325–335 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1038/emm.2004.43

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  • Published: 01 August 2004

  • Issue date: 01 August 2004

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/emm.2004.43

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Keywords

  • canine embryonic fibroblast
  • immortalization
  • p53
  • p16INK4a
  • telomerase

This article is cited by

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Experimental & Molecular Medicine (Exp Mol Med)

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ISSN 1226-3613 (print)

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