CHARACTERIZATION OF A HUMAN, SEX STEROID-RESPONSIVE TRANSITIONAL CELL-CARCINOMA MAINTAINED AS A TUMOR LINE (R198) IN ATHYMIC NUDE-MICE

  • 1 January 1984
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 44 (10), 4560-4573
Abstract
A transplantable tumor line, R198, derived from a papillary (transitional cell) carcinoma of the human urinary bladder was established. In nude mice, the tumor line exhibits properties attributable to both prostatic and transitional epithelia. In tumor-bearing animals given androgens, the neoplasm has a rapid growth rate, possesses low levels of measurable androgen receptors, produces tartrate-inhibitable acid phosphatase and forms well-encapsulated, cystic tumors composed of transitional, glandular and squamous cells. The administration of estrogens or transplantation of the tumor into female mice causes regression of the tumor. In a small percentage of the transplants placed into females or estrogenized animals, selection occurs for tumor cells which can grow under these conditions. The resulting tumors are infiltrating scirrhous carcinomas that closely resemble squamous cell carcinomas of the urinary bladder. These neoplasms grow slowly and do not possess androgen receptors or secretory material. They are composed of a homogeneous population of squamous cells which are locally invasive. The paradox of a bladder tumor with some prostatic characteristics may be explained by the fact that the tumor was derived from the trigone region of the bladder, which embryologically is formed by an admixture of tissue from the wolffian duct and the urogenital sinus. Some trigone-derived neoplasms have characteristics of both bladder and prostate. Sex steroid-sensitive R198, with characteristics of both bladder transitional cells and prostatic epithelia, is a tumor which phenotypically expresses the embryological origins of these tissues. As such, the tumor line will serve as a useful model for studying sex steroid-responsive cells of the urogenital epithelium.