Skip to Main Content
Article navigation

The concept of anchorage-dependent growth and the close relationship between anchorage independence and tumorigenicity were first appreciated more than a quarter century ago (9, 16, 23, 24). Penman and his coworkers then showed that incubation of cells in the absence of substratum (e.g., tissue culture plastic or purified extracellular matrix protein [ECM]) resulted in an inhibition of mRNA production and protein synthesis (2). These effects became less pronounced with increasing degrees of cell transformation (27). The Folkman laboratory showed that a spread cell shape, rather than adhesion per se, was required for the proliferation of anchorage- dependent cells (8). Like the effects of growth factors, the growth regulatory effects of cell anchorage and cell shape mapped to the G1 phase of the cell cycle. With the recent explosion of information about cell cycle control in general, and cyclin-dependent...

You do not currently have access to this content.
Don't already have an account? Register

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal

Gift article access

As a benefit of your subscription, you can share temporary access to restricted articles.

Each link will stop working after 30 days or 10 uses. You may create up to 10 links in a 30 day period.

Please sign in to your personal account to gift article access.

Register

Gift article access

As a benefit of your subscription, you can share temporary access to restricted articles.

Each link will stop working after 30 days or 10 uses. You may create up to 10 links in a 30 day period.

Gift articles remaining: --

Gift article access

Each link will stop working after 30 days or 10 uses. You may create up to 10 links in a 30 day period.

Gift articles remaining: --

Gift article access

As a benefit of your subscription, you can share temporary access to restricted articles.

Each link will stop working after 30 days or 10 uses.

You have reached the limit of 10 links within a 30 day period.