A transplantable tumor line (KB) was established in syngeneic rats from a naturally occurring sarcoma that had arisen in the thymus of a 24-month-old male F344 rat. Further, a cell line (KB-P) was induced from KB and a cloned cell line (KB-D8) was isolated from KB-P. The primary thymic tumor and KB tumors showed heterogeneous histological growth patterns such as sheet-like, ill-defined bundle, fascicular and interwoven fashions, consisting of spindle cells, oval cells and histiocytic large round cells. Immunohistochemically, neoplastic cells in KB tumors and KB-P and KB-D8 cultures reacted to vimentin and were labeled with antibodies of OX6 (for rat major histocompatibility complex class-II antigens), ED5 (for rat follicular dendritic cells; FDCs) and RED-1 (for interdigitating dendritic cells) in varying degrees, indicating that neoplastic cells exhibited the immunophenotypes of rat dendritic cells. In addition, neoplastic cells were immunoreactive to ED1 (for rat monocytes/macrophages) and ED2 (for rat tissue macrophages), and also showed positive reactions to histiocytic lysosomal enzymes such as acid phosphatase and non-specific esterase. Ultrastructurally, neoplastic cells had cell surface projections, cisterna-like structures and variously developed lysosomes in the cytoplasm. Based on these findings, the present tumor was regarded as dendritic cell-derived sarcoma capable of expressing macrophage-like and histiocytic nature. A reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction method revealed that the addition of lipopolysaccharide dose dependently increased the expression of mRNA of transforming growth factor-beta1, a proinflammatory factor, in KB-D8 cells. The transplantable line (KB) and cell lines (KB-P and KB-D8) may become useful tools for studying the histogenesis and pathobiological functions of dendritic cells.
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