COMPARISON OF THE GROWTH AND DIFFERENTIATION OF EPITHELIAL CELLS FROM NORMAL AND HYPERPLASTIC LENSES OF THE CHICK: STUDIES OF IN VITRO CELL CULTURES

Abstract
Epithelial cells from hyperplastic lenses of a strain of chicks (Hy-1) selected for high growth rate were dissociated and cultured in vitro and compared with lens epithelial cells from a normal strain (N) in similar conditions. The hyperplastic lens cells showed remarkable motility and adhesiveness after dissociation and formed cell aggregates of various sizes before attaching to the substrate, giving a rather low plating efficiency. The lens structures (lentoid bodies) developed in partially confluent cultures of Hy-1 cells at least three days earlier than those in the cultures from normal control cells, in which the lens structures developed only after the cultures reached confluence. The results of culture at low cell density showed that the Hy-1 cell population consisted of at least two cell types different from each other in growth capacity. These striking differences in in vitro behaviour of dissociated cells from normal and hyperplastic lens epithelia and the results of clonal culture are discussed in relation to the possible mechanisms of abnormal morphogenesis and growth which are likely to be involved in the development of the hyperplastic lens in situ.