Ecdysterone, insulin and fly extract needed for the proliferation of normal cells in defined medium
1982; Elsevier BV; Volume: 139; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/0014-4827(82)90254-3
ISSN1090-2422
Autores Tópico(s)Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
ResumoA new culture medium, ZW, and the preparation of an extract of adult Drosophila, FX, are described, which for the first time allow the in vitro proliferation of normal Drosophila cells in the absence of undefined heterologous components. Cells from 6-hour-old Drosophila embryos can extensively differentiate and/or proliferate in ZW supplemented with FX and insulin. Cells isolated from wing discs of 90–120-hour-old larvae require ecdysterone for proliferation in ZW, in addition to FX and insulin. Explanted ovaries, testes, genital discs and intact or halved wing discs of 100-hour-old larvae grow in the same medium, at least in part due to cell proliferation. High concentrations of ecdysterone prevent differentiation and/or proliferation of cells from embryos and from wing discs and cause the lysis of most isolated imaginal disc cells grown in vitro, while cuticular differentiations are induced in wing discs and disc fragments grown in vitro.
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