TRANSFORMATION OF FIBROBLASTS BY ALLOGENEIC AND XENOGENEIC TRANSPLANTS OF DEMINERALIZED TOOTH AND BONE

  • Charles Huggins
    From The Ben May Laboratory for Cancer Research, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637
  • Sol Wiseman
    From The Ben May Laboratory for Cancer Research, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637
  • A. H. Reddi
    From The Ben May Laboratory for Cancer Research, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637

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<jats:p>Xenogeneic transplants of powdered, dehydrated, demineralized matrix of bone and tooth were well tolerated in three species of rodents. Differences between the species were found in competence of fibroblasts to be transformed into cartilage and bone in vivo by these preparations. Rat fibroblasts were most susceptible to transformation of this sort; they were transformed by demineralized dentin of guinea pig, mouse, and rat, and to a limited extent, by a specimen of decalcified human bone.</jats:p>

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