The effect of vitamin A on the migration and DNA synthesis of rat bladder tumor cell line NBT II in culture (original) (raw)

PubMed, 1979

Abstract

In the presence of vitamin A, NBT II cells, derived from a carcinoma of rat bladder, grew as a monolayer with diminished piling up. Keratinization, which normally appeared within stratified cells in postconfluent cultures, was inhibited. A "wounding" technique suitable for quantitative analysis of cell migration was developed for confluent cultures grown on glass coverslips. Vitamin A treatment enhanced the migration of cells from the wound edge. In dense postconfluent monolayer cultures, vitamin A treatment maintained a higher percentage of cells in DNA synthesis than in the control cultures, as determined by 3H-TdR uptake and autoradiography. In contrast, in sparse cultures vitamin A did not stimulate DNA synthesis or increase the mitotic index. This stimulatory effect, limited to dense cultures, may be attributable to vitamin A causing viable cells to be shed into the medium, thereby maintaining the monolayer just at confluence. Thus vitamin A inhibits squamous cell differentiation, enhances migration, and maintains the culture in the proliferative phase. In a different system of high cell density, NBT II aggregates cultured in a combined matrix of chick plasma clot and collagen-coated sponge, vitamin A also enhanced the migration of cells. These results may explain, in part, the failure of vitamin A to inhibit completely the growth of some established tumors.

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