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KMID : 1094719980030010001
Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering
1998 Volume.3 No. 1 p.1 ~ p.5
Construction of artificial epithelial tissues prepared from human normal fibroblasts and C9 cervical epithelial cancer cells carrying human papillomavirus type 18 genes
Yang Eun-Kyung

Jin Seung-Won
Kang Byung-Tae
Kim Ik-Hwan
Park Jung-Keug
Lee Sang-Sook
Kim Jin-Woo
Park Sue-Nie
Abstract
One cervical cancer cell line, C9, carrying human papillomavirus type 18 (HPV18) genes that is one of the major etiologic oncoviruses for cervical cancer was characterized. This cell line was further characterized for its capacity related to the epithelial cell proliferation, stratification and differentiation in reconstituted artificial epithelial tissue. Thein vitro construction of three dimensional artificial cervical epithelial tissue has been engineered using C9 epithelial cancer cells, human foreskin fibroblasts and a matrix made of type I collagen by organotypic culture of epithelial cells. The morphology of paraffin embedded artificial tissue was examined by histochemical staining. The artificial epithelial tissues were well developed having multilayer. However, the tissue morphology was similar to the cervical tissue having displasia induced by HPV infection. The characteristics of the artificial tissues were examined by determining the expression of specific marker proteins. In the C9 derived artificial tissues, the expression of EGF receptor, an epithelial proliferation marker proteins for stratum basale was observed up to the stratum spinosum. Another epithelial proliferation marker for stratum spinosum, cytokeratins 5/6/18, were observed well over the stratum spinosum. For the differentiation markers, the expression of involucrin and filaggrin were observed while the terminal differentiation marker, cytokeratins 10/13 were not detected at all. Therefore the reconstituted artificial epithelial tissues expressed the same types of differentiation marker proteins that are expressed in normal human cervical epithelial tissues but lacked the final differentiation capacity representing characteristics of C9 cell line as a cancer tissue derived cell line. Expression of HPV18 E6 oncoprotein was also observed in this artificial cervical epithelial tissue though the intensity of the staining was weak. Thus this artificial cervical epithelial tissue though the intensity of the staining was weak. Thus this artificial epithelial tissue could be used as a useful model system to examine the relationship between HPV-induced cervical oncogenesis and epithelial cell differentiation.
KEYWORD
artificial epithelial tissue, differentiation, tissue engineering, human papillomavirus (HPV) oncogenesis
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