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Saos-2 cells
Saos-2 ("sarcoma osteogenic") is a cell line derived from the primary osteosarcoma of an 11-year-old Caucasian girl in 1973 by Fogh et al. The cell line is commonly used in bone cancer research as a model for testing novel therapies.
In 1987 Rodan et al. determined that Saos-2 cells "possess several osteoblastic features and could be useful as a permanent line of human osteoblast-like cells and as a source of bone-related molecules."
Besides their worldwide availability, some of the advantages for using Saos-2 cell line are that they have well-documented characterization data, the possibility to obtain large amounts of cells in short time, and the fact that Saos-2 cells can be fully differentiated in a manner that the osteoblastic cells naturally do. The latter point is described particularly as "the ability of Saos-2 cells to deposit a mineralization-competent extracellular matrix", which makes these cells a valuable model for studying events associated with the late osteoblastic-osteocyte differentiation stage in human cells.
References
References
- (1977). "One hundred and twenty-seven cultured human tumor cell lines producing tumors in nude mice". J Natl Cancer Inst.
- "Saos-2". ATCC.
- (1987). "Characterization of a human osteosarcoma cell line (Saos-2) with osteoblastic properties". Cancer Res..
- (2005). "Phenotypic instability of Saos-2 cells in long-term culture". Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun..
- (1995). "Matrix deposition by a calcifying human osteogenic sarcoma cell line (SAOS- 2)". Bone.
- (1995). "The isolation and culture of cells from explants of human trabecular bone". Calcif. Tissue Int..
- (2014). "Saos2 osteosarcoma cells as an in vitro model for studying the transition of human osteoblasts to osteocytes". Calcif. Tissue Int..
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