CHARACTERIZATION OF HUMAN TRANSFORMING GENES FROM CHEMICALLY TRANSFORMED, TERATOCARCINOMA, AND PANCREATIC-CARCINOMA CELL-LINES

  • 1 January 1984
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 44 (1), 1-10
Abstract
Dominant transforming genes that were transferred to mouse NIH3T3 cells by cellular DNA prepared from a chemically transformed human cell line (MNNG-HOS), a human teratocarcinoma cell line (PA1) and a human pancreatic carcinoma cell line (A1165) were characterized analyzing the repetitive human DNA sequences that were associated with the transforming gene and determing their relationship to the oncogenes of the Harvey (rasH) and Kirsten (rasK) sarcoma viruses and to the human neuroblastoma transforming gene (rasN). The transforming gene activated in the teratocarcinoma cell line is identical to the neuroblastoma transforming gene. The transforming gene of the pancreatic carcinoma cell line is a human homologue of rasK. The transforming gene activated in the chemically transformed human cell line showed no detectable homology to rasK, rasH and rasN.