Article Publish Status: FREE
Abstract Title:

Feasibility of drug screening with panels of human tumor cell lines using a microculture tetrazolium assay.

Abstract Source:

Cancer Res. 1988 Feb 1 ;48(3):589-601. PMID: 3335022

Abstract Author(s):

M C Alley, D A Scudiero, A Monks, M L Hursey, M J Czerwinski, D L Fine, B J Abbott, J G Mayo, R H Shoemaker, M R Boyd

Article Affiliation:

Program Resources, Inc., National Cancer Institute-Frederick Cancer Research Facility, Maryland 21701.

Abstract:

For the past 30 years strategies for the preclinical discovery and development of potential anticancer agents have been based largely upon the testing of agents in mice bearing transplantable leukemias and solid tumors derived from a limited number of murine as well as human sources. The feasibility of implementing an alternate approach, namely combined in vitro/in vivo screening for selective cytotoxicity among panels of human tumor cell lines derived from a broad spectrum of human solid tumors is under investigation. A group of 30 cell lines acquired from a variety of sources and representing 8 lung cancer pathologies as well as 76 cell lines representing 10 other categories of human cancer (carcinomas of colon, breast, kidney, prostate, ovary, head and neck; glioma; leukemia; melanoma; and sarcoma) have exhibited acceptable growth characteristics and suitable colorimetric profiles in a single, standard culture medium. Measurements of in vitro growth in microculture wells by cell-mediated reduction of tetrazolium showed excellent correlation (0.89 less than r2 less than 0.98) with measurements of cellular protein in adherent cell line cultures as well as viable cell count in suspension cell line cultures (0.94 less than r2 less than 0.99). Since the microculture tetrazolium assay provides sensitive and reproducible indices of growth as well as drug sensitivity in individual cell lines over the course of multiple passages and several months' cultivation, it appears suitable for initial-stage in vitro drug screening.

Study Type : Review

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