PMID: 8606490Apr 1, 1996Paper

Characterization of the continuous cell line HepT1 derived from a human hepatoblastoma

Laboratory Investigation; a Journal of Technical Methods and Pathology
T PietschD von Schweinitz

Abstract

Hepatoblastoma is the most common malignant pediatric liver tumor. The molecular mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of hepatoblastoma are unknown. Cell lines can be valuable tools in the study of tumor biology, but only few hepatoblastoma cell lines have been established. We explanted tumor tissue from human hepatoblastomas to generate cell lines. A continuous cell line (HepT1) was established from a human hepatoblastoma with predominant embryonal differentiation. The HepT1 cell line was characterized by immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, cytogenetics, and molecular genetic analysis. In addition, the cultured cells were xenografted into nude mice and the resulting tumors compared with the original tumor. The cells grew in epithelial clusters, and expressed cytokeratins and alpha-fetoprotein. Injection of HepT1 cells into nude mice gave rise to serially transplantable subcutaneous tumors. The cell line as well as the xenotransplants displayed the phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of the primary tumor. Ultrastructural analysis demonstrated desmosomal junctions and the formation of bile canaliculi. Cytogenetic analysis showed a near tetraploid karyotype with structural and numerical aberrations of chromosomes 1...Continue Reading

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