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| - This paper describes a new fully differentiated Type-II alveolar epithelial cell line designated T(7), derived from transgenic H-2K(b)-tsA58 mice, capable of being passaged as an immortalized cloned cell line in culture. H-2K(b)-tsA58 mice harbor a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of the simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor antigen (T antigen) under the control of the γ-interferon (INF)-inducible mouse major histocompatibility complex H-2K(b) promoter. When cultured under permissive conditions (33°C and in the presence of γ-INF) cells isolated from H-2K(b)-tsA58 mice express the large T antigen, which drives the cells to proliferate. However, upon withdrawal of the γ-INF and transfer of the cells to a higher temperature (39°C), T antigen expression is turned off, the cells stop proliferating and differentiate. The T(7) cell line is a clonal cell line originally derived from a Type-II cell-rich fraction isolated from lungs of H-2K(b)-tsA58 mice. The T(7) cells form confluent monolayers, and have a polarized epithelial cell morphology with tight junctions and apical microvilli. In addition, the T(7) cells have distinct cytoplasmic lamellar bodies, which become more numerous and pronounced when the cells are grown under nonpermissive conditions. The T(7) cells synthesize and secrete phosphatidylcholine and the three surfactant proteins, SP-A, SP-B, and SP-C. The T(7) cell line is unique in that it is the first non-tumor-derived Type-II cell line capable of synthesizing and secreting the major components of surfactant. Based on the criteria studied, the T(7) cell line is phenotypically very similar to normal Type-II cells. The T(7) cell line, therefore, should prove a valuable experimental system to advance the study of the cell biology/physiology of surfactant metabolism and secretion as well as serve as a model for other studies of Type-II cell physiology.
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