Two distinct human uterine cervical epithelial cell lines established after transfection with human papillomavirus 16 DNA

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Abstract

We have established two distinct human cervical cell lines, NCC16 and NCE16, after transfecting human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) DNA into normal human ecto-cervical and endo-cervical epithelial cells, respectively. Both lines expressed HPV16 E6 and E7 as detected by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and northern blot hybridization. These cells have been passaged for over 100 population doublings and express strong telomerase activity. Neither cell line was tumorigenic in athymic nu/nu mice. However, both NCC16 and NCE16 developed abnormally stratified architectures following implantation with a silicon membrane sheet in the back of athymic nude mice. The former cells were pathohistologically similar to carcinoma, while the latter produced Alcian-blue positive cells, suggesting the occurrence of metaplastic changes. These distinct cell lines offer a useful model system for the study of cervical carcinogenesis and of its regulatory mechanism after HPV infection in different regions of the uterine cervix.

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Ohta, Y., Tsutsumi, K., Kikuchi, K., & Yasumoto, S. (1997). Two distinct human uterine cervical epithelial cell lines established after transfection with human papillomavirus 16 DNA. Japanese Journal of Cancer Research, 88(7), 644–651. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.1997.tb00432.x

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