Tsuchie H, Katsumoto T, Hama S, Hattori N, Morimoto H, Kamahora T, Kurimura T
Int J Cancer. 1986 Jan 15;37(1):161-4. doi: 10.1002/ijc.2910370125.
The characteristics of the cytoskeleton of a Fischer rat embryo fibroblast cell line (3Y1) transformed by ultraviolet (UV)-irradiated HSV were studied by indirect immunofluorescence using anti-actin IgG. Parental 3Y1 cells possessed well-developed actin filaments, while 3Y1 cells transformed by UV-irradiated HSV also retained well-developed actin filaments. Transformed cells were divided into 2 groups according to tumorigenicity in newborn Fischer rats; one had a strongly tumorigenic potential and the other a weakly tumorigenic potential. Tumor-derived cell lines exhibited a highly tumorigenic potential, and were also divided into 2 groups, one with well-developed actin filaments and the other without well-developed actin filaments. Our results suggested that transformation or tumor formation by HSV is a multi-step process and that morphological loss of actin filaments in the cells is not essential to the tumorigenic potential of the cells transformed by HSV.