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  • Articles  (2,152)
  • General Chemistry  (2,024)
  • Cell & Developmental Biology  (128)
  • 1980-1984  (1,287)
  • 1970-1974  (865)
  • 1915-1919
  • 1982  (1,287)
  • 1970  (865)
  • Chemistry and Pharmacology  (2,152)
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  • Articles  (2,152)
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  • 1980-1984  (1,287)
  • 1970-1974  (865)
  • 1915-1919
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 187-258 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: fibronectin ; sponges ; Geodia cydonium ; aggregation ; cell recognition ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Experiments were carried out to test the hypothesis that fibronectin is involved in reaggregation of dissociated sponge cells. Cells from the siliceous sponge Geodia cydonium were extracted with urea to solubilize fibronectin from cells of higher multicellular organisms. The crude extract was further fractionated by DNA, heparin, and collagen affinity chromatography; they were termed Geodia fibronectinlike fractions. The fibronectinlike fractions contained a series of proteins with molecular weights different from that of the genuine fibronectin. The Geodia fibronectinlike fractions did not react with antiserum, produced against human fibronectin, under formation of a precipitin line. Using this antiserum the sponge cells could not be specifically labeled with FITC-anti-IgG antiserum. Radioimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed that the Geodia fractions contain - if at all - 0.1% fibronectin or fibronectinlike protein at the most. In the crucial experiments it was shown that the Geodia fibronectinlike fractions, human fibronectin, and antifibronectin antiserum exerted no influence on adhesion of Geodia cells either in the absence or in the presence of the soluble aggregation factor. Based on these findings, we conclude that fibronectin is apparently not present on Geodia cells and does not play a role in aggregation of this biological system.
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  • 3
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 259-356 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 4
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 357-382 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982) 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 6
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 1-13 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: nerve growth factor ; sympathetic neurons ; electron microscopic autoradiography ; retrograde axonal transport ; lysosomotropic agents ; internalization of nerve growth factor ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Primary cell cultures of sympathetic neurons from rat were exposed to 125I-nerve growth factor (NGF) and the fate of the NGF in the cell was followed using electron microscopic autoradiography. The intracellular localization of NGF was determined in the cell bodies and in the proximal neurites of neurons that had been grown in three-chamber dishes, following 5 or 24 hr of retrograde transport of NGF from the distal portions of the neurites. Label in the proximal neurites was predominantly associated with lysosomes and multivesicular bodies (MVBs), and at 5 hr elongated tubular elements were especially heavily labeled. Most of the label in the cell bodies was concentrated in lysosomes and MVBs. Lysosomes accounted for the largest fraction (45-60%) of the grains in the cell body, with a labeling density (LD = % grains/% area) of 3-5, while MVBs accounted for 5-10% of the grains with an LD of 5-20. We observed no evidence of nuclear labeling after 5 or 24 hr of retrograde transport. Mass cultures of neurons were incubated for 22 hr with NGF in the presence of the lysosomal inhibitors chloroquine (CQ, 0.05 mM) or methylamine (MA, 10 mM). In both agents the lysosomes were swollen with membranous material but still sequestered NGF, especially in CQ where the lysosomes were associated with almost 65% of the grains and had an LD of 6. CQ and MA had different effects on the morphology of the MVBs: in CQ they were few in number and compact while in MA they were numerous and appeared swollen and vacuolated. We observed no evidence for the nuclear accumulation of NGF even in the presence of the lysosomotropic agents.
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  • 7
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 15-27 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: activation ; glucocorticoid-receptor complex ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A crucial step in the interaction of glucocorticoids with target cells is the activation step, which involves a conformational change in the cytoplasmic glucocorticoid-receptor protein complexes and facilitates their binding to the cell nucleus. Activation can be quantified by measuring the ability of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes to bind to polyanions, such as DNA-cellulose, and unactivated complexes can be separated from activated complexes by rapid ion exchange chromatography using diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-Sephadex or DEAE-cellulose. Activation occurs in vivo under physiological conditions and the rate of activation of cytoplasmic glucocorticoid-receptor complexes can be enhanced in vitro by physical manipulations (elevated temperature, increased ionic strength, dilution). In vitro studies suggest that activation is a regulated process and a low molecular weight component termed modulator, which has been identified in rat hepatic cytosol, inhibits activation. Additional studies employing phosphatase inhibitors, such as molybdate, and purified calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase suggest that either the receptor protein or a regulatory component is dephosphorylated during activation. Results obtained with specific chemical probes suggest that activation results in the exposure of basic amino acid residues consisting minimally of lysine, arginine, and histidine. Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate, a specific probe for lysine residues, exerts dual effects on glucocorticoid-receptor complexes, since it stimulates the rate of activation and also inhibits the binding of previously activated complexes to nuclei or DNA-cellulose. The ability of 1,10-phenanthroline, a metal chelator, to inhibit the DNA-cellulose binding of activated complexes suggests that a metal ion(s) located at or near the DNA binding site may become exposed as a consequence of activation. Collectively, the results of these various experiments suggest that activation is a regulated biochemical phenomenon with physiological significance.
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  • 8
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 29-39 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 9
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 41-50 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: hormone receptors ; Golgi ; lysosomes ; Percoll gradient ; endocytosis ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The intracellular translocation and processing of epidermal growth factor (EOF) in 3T3 cells has been studied utilizing Percoll density gradients. EGF is internalized and rapidly becomes associated with two types of intracellular compartments. The extent to which EGF is delivered to these two compartments is apparently regulated depending upon the cell's physiological condition. In growth medium, an increased proportion of EGF is taken up into a Golgi-like element. Uptake through this pathway correlates with a decrease in degradation of the ligand. In the absence of scrum and amino acids, an increased proportion of EGF is taken up into a component which has a density of 1.05. Uptake through this pathway correlates with increased degradation of the ligand. The ligand taken up through both pathways is transferred to dense vesicles which comigrate with lysosomes. In the presence of growth medium, however, dense vesicles containing EGF can be shown to be lysosomal enzyme-deficient upon further fractionation. In addition, in the presence of serum, a portion of the internalized EGF is apparently released from the cells, intact, and then re-bound. The processes described may be important in the production of a mitogenic response and the ability of cells to self-regulate their responsiveness to the growth factor.
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  • 10
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 51-61 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: NIH/3T3 cells ; carcinoma ; sarcoma ; T24 bladder carcinoma cells ; transfection ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: DNAs isolated from a variety of human tumor cell lines as well as from naturally occurring human carcinomas and sarcomas were shown to induce morphologic transformation upon transfection into NIH/3T3 cells. All tested transformants contained human DNA sequences, some of which specifically cosegregated with the malignant phenotype in additional cycles of transfection. Southern blot analysis of second cycle transformants derived from T24 human bladder carcinoma cells showed the presence of a single 15 kbp EcoRI fragment of human DNA. These sequences were molecularly cloned utilizing λ Charon 9A as the cloning vector. The resulting recombinant DNA molecule, designated λ T24-15A, was shown to contain an internal 6.6 kbp Bam HI fragment of human DNA that transformed NIH/3T3 fibroblasts with a specific activity of 5 × 104 focus forming units per picomol. These results indicate that we have moleculary cloned an oncogene present in T24 bladder carcinoma cells. Comparison of molecular clones containing the T24 oncogene and its normal homologue did not reveal biochemical differences that helped to explain the malignant properties of this oncogene. Finally, we report preliminary results indicating that the T24 bladder carcimoma oncogene is highly related to the transforming gene of BALB-MSV, an acute transforming retrovirus.
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  • 11
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 139-148 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: epithelial cells ; malignant transformation ; 3611-MSV ; procollagen ; 58,000- and 60,000-dalton polypeptides ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Mouse embryo epithelial cells MMC-E were transformed by novel fibrosarcoma-inducing murine sarcoma virus 3611 -MSV. The cells were analyzed for the production and deposition of pericellular glycoproteins by immunofluorescence and by radioactive metabolic and cell surface labeling techniques followed by analysis in polyacrylamide gels and fluorography. The pericellular fibronectin matrix was lost, but unlike in virus-transformed fibroblastic cells, the production of fibronectin was not affected. The major differences detected were decrease in collagen production and initiation of synthesis of two major glycoproteins with Mr 58,000 and 60,000. Cell surface carbohydrate labeling indicated that after 3611-MSV transformation the cells expressed Mr 100,000 and 68,000 polypeptides. The present and previous results show that viral transformation of epithelial cells induces different transformed phenotypes that are associated with distinct alterations in pericellular glycoproteins.
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  • 12
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982) 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 13
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 1-13 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: cell-substratum adhesion ; cell surface ; integral membrane glycoproteins ; conserved structure ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Broad spectrum antisera have been raised against surface membrane-derived material from baby hamster kidney cells and mouse mammary tumor epithelial cells. These antisera disrupt cell-substratum adhesion in their respective cell types. Using an antibody neutralization (blocking) assay, adhesion-related glycoproteins have been isolated from non-ionic detergent extracts of each cell type. The purified material in each case consisted of a restricted population of glycoproteins of approximately 120,000-160,000 Mr. Purified material from each system blocked the disruption of adhesion induced by the heterologous antiserum on either cell type. The antisera were capable of disrupting cell-substratum adhesion of a large number of cell types and species sources. In addition, antibody blocking activity could be detected from partially purified extracts of several adult hamster cell types and a variety-of cultured cell types. Thus, in addition to having similar substratum-associated glycoproteins (eg, fibronectin) and cytoskeleton-associated proteins (eg, α-actinin and vinculin) cells from different species and tissue sources appear to have a relatively conserved class of integral membrane glycoproteins involved in cell substratum-adhesion.
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  • 14
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 15-24 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: T lymphocytes ; colonies ; in vitro ; human ; whole blood ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Growth of human lymphocyte colonies from whole blood following stimulation with PHA, Con A, or PPD is described. Individual colony cells were identified as T lymphocytes on the basis of surface marker and enzyme cytochemical characterizations. Colony formation increased as a power function over a wide range of cell concentrations above a critical minimal concentration. The whole blood culture system eliminates possible selective effects of lymphocyte colony techniques utilizing gradient-enriched lymphocyte fractions and more closely approximates the in vivo milieu. The whole blood colony method is more sensitive for the detection of low-level radiation effects on lymphocytes than widely used tests that measure 3H-thymidine incorporation. In preliminary studies, we used the whole blood method to determine the relative radiosensitivity of lymphocytes from humans with various hematopoietic disorders, and observed abnormalties in mitogen responsiveness and colony formation in some of the patient groups. This method has wide application for studies in cellular and clinical immunology.
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  • 15
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 25-35 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: substrate adhesion ; basement membrane ; laminin ; collagen ; extracellular matrix ; neuronal cells ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The deposition of the basement membrane glycoproteins, laminin, fibronectin, and type IV procollagen was studied by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy during the attachment and differentiation of murine C-1300 neuroblastoma cells. A typical cytoplasmic perinuclear staining for the basement membrane antigens was seen both in undifferentiated and differentiated cells. Freshly seeded suspended cells lacked surface fluorescence but in two hours after plating, distinct punctate laminin deposits became discernible on the ventral surface of the cells. Notably, in sparsely seeded undifferentiated cultures, the cell-associated extracellular laminin deposits could only be detected under the primary attaching cells, whereas daughter cells in clonal cell colonies lacked such fluorescence. In cultures induced to neurite formation with dibutyryl cyclic AMP, laminin deposition was also detected in association with the growing cytoplasmic extensions. No distinct differences were found between the secreted proteins of cultures of differentiated and nondifferentiated neuroblastoma cells, but the patterns of fucosylation of high-molecular weight proteins in the two cultures were markedly different.We conclude that cultured neuroblastoma cells both synthesize, secrete and deposit laminin. The distribution of laminin during neuroblastoma cell attachment and neurite extension suggests that this glycoprotein may be involved in cell-to-substratum interactions in C-1300 cell cultures.
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  • 16
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 67-85 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 17
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 49-65 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: erythrocyte membrane ; cytoskeleton ; membrane protein ; microtubule-associated protein ; hemolytic anemia ; hereditary spherocytosis ; hereditary elliptocytosis ; spectrin ; band 3 ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Spectrin, the major cytoskeletal protein in erythrocytes, is localized on the inner membrane surface in association with membrane-spanning glycoproteins and with intramembrane particles. The presence of a specific, high-affinity protein binding site for spectrin on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane has been established by measurement of reassociation of spectrin with spectrin-depleted inside-out vesicles. A 72,000 Mr proteolytic fragment of this attachment protein has been purified, which bound to spectrin in solution and competed for reassociation of spectrin with vesicles. A 215,000 Mr polypeptide has been identified as the precursor of the spectrin-binding fragment. The membrane attachment protein for spectrin was named ankyrin, and has been purified and characterized. Ankyrin has been demonstrated to be tightly associated in detergent extracts of vesicles with band 3, a major membrane-spanning polypeptide, and to bind directly to a proteolytic fragment derived from the cytoplasmic domain of band 3. Ankyrin is thus an example of a protein that directly links a cytoplasmic structural protein to an integral membrane protein. The organization of the erythrocyte membrane has implications for more complex cell types since immunoreactive forms of ankyrin distinct from myosin or filamin have been detected by radioimmunoassay in a variety of cells and tissues. Indirect immunofluorescent staining of cultured cells reveals immunoreactive forms of ankyrin in a cytoplasmic meshwork and in a punctate distribution over nuclei. The staining changes dramatically during mitosis, with concentration of stain at the spindle poles in metaphase and intense staining of the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis.
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  • 18
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 225-235 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: histone hyperacetylation ; acetylation sites ; mammalian cells ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Human and mouse cells in culture were treated with various concentrations of sodium butyrate. Acid-extracted histones of control and butyrate-treated cells were analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. All core histones of the control cells contained modified forms. All core histones of the butyrate-treated cells were hyperacetylated. Depending on the number of acetylation sites per molecule, each histone or histone variant exhibited a characteristic number of acetylated forms. This number was the same for each histone common in human and mouse cells treated with butyrate. Histones 2A.1, 2A.2, and 2A.X have two sites of inner acetylation; 2A.Z has 3; 2B's have 5; and each one of the H3 variants as well as H4 have 4.
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  • 19
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 215-223 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: interferon ; phospholipids ; methylation ; membrane fluidity ; phosphatidylcholine ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The effect of human interferon (IFN) preparations on the metabolic pathway leading to the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine (PC) by a stepwise addition of methyl groups to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) was investigated in human peripheral blood mononuclear (PBMN) cells. An inhibition of the synthesis of PC via this pathway was regularly observed with both α- (recombinant or natural) and β-IFN. This inhibition was apparent within the first 5 min of treatment, reached its maximum between 15 min and 1 hr, and persisted at the same level until 6 hr, the last time point examined. Each of the transmethylated products of PF underwent a similar inhibition, as measured by the turnover rate of individual products. The intracellular pool of the methyl donors, methionine and S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM), was shown to be unaffected. The methyltransferase activity of IFN-pretreated cell extracts was unchanged. These findings support the hypothesis that IFN induces a functional change in phospholipid methylation at the level of organized membrane-bound phospholipid methyltransferase enzymes in intact cells.
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  • 20
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 149-156 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: gene amplification tsA209 ; DNA synthesis ; benzo(a)pyrene ; MNNG ; DMBA ; EMS ; AFB1 ; MCA ; DBA ; phenanthrene ; chromosomal rearrangement ; carcinogenesis ; transformation ; Chinese hamster ; short-term assay ; amplification ; onion skin replication ; origin of replication ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A model experimental system based on SV40-transformed Chinese hamster embryo cells and a highly sensitive in situ hybridization procedure was designed. Exposure of the cells to different categories of chemical and physical carcinogens resulted in the induction of SV40 DNA synthesis in the treated cells. Although the carcinogen-mediated amplification of SV40 DNA sequences is regulated by the viral “A” gene, neither infectious virus nor complete viral DNA molecules were rescued from the treated cells. A heterogenous collection of DNA molecules containing SV40 sequences was generated following treatment with DMBA. Restriction enzyme analysis of the amplified DNA molecules in the Hirt supernatant revealed that not all sequences in the integrated SV40 inserts are present. The possibility that the amplification of SV40 sequences is a reflection of a general gene amplification phenomenon mediated by carcinogens is discussed.
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  • 21
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 181-196 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 22
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 317-330 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 23
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 349-357 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: glucocorticoid action ; gene transfer ; mouse mammary tumor virus ; thymidine kinase gene ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A chimeric long terminal repeat-thymidinc kinasc (LTR-tk) gene has been used to define the sequence requirements for glucocorticoid induction of gene expression. The original LTR-tk gene contains an entire mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) LTR preceding the tk gene. This gene can be expressed in a hormone-responsive fashion upon transfection into L tk - cells to produce a chimeric LTR-tk mRNA. Stepwise deletion of nuclcotide sequences 5′ of the viral RNA initiation site revealed that 202 nucleotides upstream of the viral cap site are sufficient for the hormonal regulation. Deletion of 5′ sequences up to 59 nucleotides upstream of the viral cap site abolished RNA initiation in the LTR and hormonal induction.
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  • 24
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 331-336 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: de novo methylation of retroviral genomes ; virus expression during embryogenesis ; embryonal carcinoma cells ; maintenance methylation ; preimplantation mouse embryos ; postimplantation mouse embryos ; infectivity of retroviral genomes ; integration and methylation of retroviral genomes ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: By exposing preimplantation embryos to Moloney leukemia virus (M-MuLV), we have previously derived substrains of mice designated as Mov-1-Mov-13 which genetically transmit the virus from one generation to the next. In some of the substrains the inserted viral genome becomes activated at specific stages of embryogenesis and the available evidence suggests that these viral genomes are developmentally regulated. To investigate the effect of cellular differentiation on virus expression, M-MuLV was introduced either into preimplantation or postimplantation mouse embryos or into embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells. Whereas preimplantation embryos or EC cells are not permissive for virus expression, efficient replication occurred in postimplantation embryos or in differentiated cell lines. The viral genomes introduced into early embryonal cells were highly methylated and noninfcctious when analyzed in the adult. In contrast, viral genomes introduced into postimplantation embryos or into differentiated cells remained unmethylated and were infectious in a transfection assay. These results demonstrate an efficient de novo methylation activity which appears to be involved in repression of genes introduced into pluripotent embryonal cells and which is not observed in cells of the postimplantation embryo or in differentiated cells in tissue culture.
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  • 25
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 359-367 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: cholera toxin ; abrin ; ricin ; inhibition of protein synthesis ; protection effect ; receptor redistribution ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The glycoproteins ricin and abrin intoxicate cells by inhibiting protein synthesis. Pretreatment of HeLa cells with cholera toxin partially protects them from ricin and abrin activity. The involvement in this phenomenon of the various effects of cholera toxin, namely, redistribution of membrane receptors elicited from protomer B and increasing cyclic AMP concentrations induced by protomer A, were studied. Substances able to enhance cyclic AMP concentrations do not affect ricin and abrin activity, while protomer B alone protects cells. In addition, the effects of several lectins on ricin or abrin toxicity were examined. Almost complete prevention of ricin or abrin activity was obtained using concanavalin A (Con A) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). Conversely, neither succinyl Con A nor Ulexeuropeus agglutinin (UEA) affected the cellular response. Both protomer B of cholera toxin and Con A did not alter the binding of ricin or abrin; they seem to protect cells by altering membrane structure.
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  • 26
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 221-229 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: monoclonal antibodies ; myogenesis ; cell surface ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Two monoclonal antibodies that cause changes in the morphology of cultured myogenic cells are described. Antibody JG9 causes myoblasts to round up and causes myotubes to become thin, cable-like structures with multiple round swellings. Antibody JG22 causes both myoblasts and myotubes to become round refractile cells poorly attached to the substratum. The effects of both antibodies are reversible. Fab fragments of JG22 can cause the morphological change. A tentative identification of the antigen recognized by JG22 is made.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: phosphatidylinositol ; human platelets ; alpha catecholamines ; clonidine ; yohimbine ; prazosin ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Epinephrine and adenosine diphosphate (ADP) stimulated 3H-glycerol uptake into phosphatidylinositol of human platelets. Yohimbine, an alpha-2 adrenoceptor antagonist, markedly reduced epinephrine-stimulated 3H-glycerol uptake into phosphatidylinositol; while prazosin, an alpha-1 antagonist, was without effect. Likewise, yohimbine, but not prazosin, blocked epinephrine-induced platelet aggregation. Furthermore, clonidine, a specific agonist for alpha-2 adrenoceptors, stimulated incorporation of-3H-glycerol into phosphatidylinositol and promoted platelet aggregation in the presence of low concentrations of ADP. These studies indicate that the effects of epinephrine on platelet aggregation and phosphatidylinositol synthesis are mediated through alpha-2 adrenoceptors. Further, since the stimulation of phosphatidylinositol synthesis seen with epinephrine was also observed with ADP, this suggests that the increased 3H-glycerol labeling is an indirect result of platelet aggregation.
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  • 28
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982) 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 29
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: peripheral membrane proteins ; sugar transport ; energy coupling ; bacteria ; phosphotransferase system ; osmotic shock ; membrane vesicles ; protein-protein interactions ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Several independent assay procedures were used to estimate the activities of the enzyme constituents of the phosphoenolpyruvate-sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) in osmotically shocked bacterial membrane vesicles. The soluble enzymes of the system were found to be in association with the membrane by several criteria. Phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent sugar phosphorylation was catalyzed by this membrane-bound enzyme system far more efficiently than by a mixture of the individual enzymes at corresponding concentrations. By contrast, the rates of the phosphoryl exchange reactions catalyzed by enzyme I and the enzyme II complexes were essentially the same for the associated and dissociated forms of the system. Functional association of the PTS-enzyme complex was stabilized by Mg++ and phosphoenolpyruvate and could be destroyed by detergent treatment, sonication, or by passage of the vesicle preparation through a French pressure cell. These results lead to the possibility that in the intact bacterial cell the soluble enzymes of the phosphotransferase system exist, in part, as peripheral membrane constituents associated with the integral membrane enzyme II complexes.
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  • 30
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 337-349 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: lectin ; concanavalin A ; cytotoxic T lymphocytes ; histocompatibility antigens ; lymphocyte-target cell interactions ; cytolysis ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have investigated the role of target cell major histocompatibility complex antigens (MHC-Ag) in nonspecific lectin-dependent lymphocyte-mediated cytolysis (LDCC). In contrast to previous reports, we provide evidence that in LDCC the lectin Concanavalin A (Con A) does not mediate lysis by simply bridging cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) and targets via cell surface sugars or by activating the lytic function of CTLs attached to targets via the lectin. Lysis occurs when target cells are pretreated with lectin, but not when CTL are pretreated. Moreover, when CTL populations are used as both aggressors and targets, and only one is pretreated with lectin, lysis occurs only in the direction of the pretreated CTL target. We have observed that in LDCC, as in specific CTL-mediated killing, target recognition proceeds through interaction of CTL receptors (distinct from sugar moieties) and target cell surface determinants perhaps modified by, but distinct from, the lectin itself. We present evidence that the target determinants recognized in LDCC are MHC-Ag: 1) Cells that display reduced amounts of MHC-Ag are poor targets in LDCC; 2) removal of MHC-Ag by papain renders targets refractory to LDCC, however susceptibility is regained upon regeneration of MHC-Ag; and 3) antisera to target cell MHC-Ag block LDCC. The latter finding is also observed in oxidation-dependent CTL-mediated cytotoxicity. Involvement of MHC proteins in both specific and nonspecific CTL-mediated lysis reconciles an apparent fundamental distinction between these two processes and suggests a possible role for MHC proteins in a postrecognition step(s) leading to lysis.
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  • 31
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 313-335 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: surface glycoproteins ; myoblast fusion ; glycosylation ; proteolysis ; cell adhesion ; cathepsin B ; intracellular processing ; export/secretion ; tunicamycin ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: To determine the function of the carbohydrate moiety of glycoproteins, we have used tunicamycin, an analog of N-acetylglucosamine, to inhibit the glycosylation of N-glycosidically linked glycoproteins. First, we examined the effect of this drug on the intracellular processing, export and biological activity of fibronectin-the major cell surface glycoprotein of chick embryo fibroblasts. Chick fibroblasts treated with tunicamycin produced only nonglycosylated fibronectin and the export or secretion of the carbohydrate-free protein species was not totally impaired. We did observe that there was a substantial decrease in the absolute amount of nonglycosylated fibronectin on the cell surface and in the culture medium. This decrease was shown to be due to increased proteolytic degradation of the nonglycosylated protein species.To examine the biological activity of nonglycosylated fibronectin, we compared the activities of the glycosylated and nonglycosylated forms of this protein utilizing in vitro assay procedures. We have shown that isolated, nonglycosylated fibronectin retained the biological properties characteristic of the glycosylated protein; they are: 1) promotion of cell-cell and cell-substratum adhesion, 2) restoration of normal behavior and phenotype to transformed cells, and 3) promotion of cell binding to collagen. The isolated, nonglycosylated protein was shown to be more sensitive to degradation by proteolytic enzymes, in agreement with the data obtained “in vivo.”The requirement of glycosylation for the export of acetylcholine receptor was also examined. We found that treatment of embryonic muscle cells in culture with tunicamycin did not inhibit the export of this protein to the cell surface. As with fibronectin, there was a substantial decrease in the amount of receptor present on the cell surface, due to enhanced proteolysis of the nonglycosylated protein. The simultaneous treatment of cells with the protease inhibitor leupeptin diminished the rate of degradation of the nonglycosylated receptor and restored the expression of receptor on the cell surface.Finally, the requirement for N-glycosidically linked glycoproteins during differentiation of embryonic myoblasts into multinucleated, functional muscle fibers was also investigated. Tunicamycin blocked the expression of glycoproteins on the cell surface and strongly inhibited fusion when added to cultures of differentiating muscle cells prior to fusion. The inhibition of fusion was partially prevented when tunicamycin was administered in the presence of protease inhibitors such as leupeptin and pepstatin. Both glycosylation and fusion were completely restored to normal after removal of tunicamycin from the medium. These studies provide strong support for the idea that myoblast fusion is partially mediated by surface glycoproteins with asparagine-linked oligosaccharides. However, the requirement for the carbohydrate portion of the glycoprotein appears to be indirect in that it acts to stabilize the protein moiety against proteolytic degradation.To elucidate the mechanism responsible for the enhancement of proteolysis of cell surface glycoproteins following treatment with tunicamycin, we investigated the effect of tunicamycin on the intracellular processing of proteolytic enzymes. Treatment of chick embryo fibroblasts with tunicamycin resulted in more than a 10-fold increase in the amount of protease activity released into the culture medium. The enzyme activity has been tentatively identified as cathepsin B based on substrate specificity, pH optimum and inhibition with leupeptin.These results as well as extensive work by other investigators [see references [1-11] for recent reviews] suggest that the carbohydrate moiety of surface glycoproteins is not required for their synthesis, secretion or biological function, but instead helps to protect the protein against proteolytic degradation. In contrast, in agreement with the results of Neufeld et al [12-24] and Sly et al [15, 16], the carbohydrate moiety of lysosomal enzymes is required for their intracellular retention.
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  • 32
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 423-431 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: endocytosis ; macrophage-like cell line ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A macrophage-like cell line (P388D1) has been used to demonstrate that glucocorticoids inhibit the fluid-phase endocytosis of fluorescein-labeled dextran (FITC-dextran). Initial experiments demonstrated that the interaction of FITC-dextran with cells had all the features of fluid-phase uptake, ie, the amount taken up was proportional to the concentration in the medium, the uptake proceeded continuously with time and was blocked at 4°C. Dexamethasone (10-7M) had no effect on endocytosis until 11 hours after addition of the steroid, when it inhibited the uptake of FITC-dextran by 35%. The amount of inhibition increased with longer exposure times to the hormone up to 50% after 22 hours. Although this effect on endocytosis was Observed prior to any effect on growth of the cells, endocytosis as well as cell proliferation were inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion. A preliminary survey of selected steroids has established that the inhibition of endocytosis was restricted to steroids of the glucocorticoid class. The key experiments were also performed using horseradish peroxidase instead of FITC-dextran with, essentially, identical results.
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  • 33
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 407-421 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: MDCK cells ; occluding junctions ; permeability ; cytoskeleton ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: In MDCK cell monolayers the opening and resealing of occluding junctions can be induced by removal and restoration of calcium to the external medium. The overall changes in permeability of the occluding junctions in the monolayer can be monitored by the drop and recovery of the total transepithelial electrical resistance. We have investigated the effects of cytochalasin B (CB) on this process. When CB is added to sealed monolayers there is a gradual drop in the electrical resistance across the monolayer. This drop is accompanied by a slow disorganization of the microfilament pattern of these cells, including a disturbance of a ring of cortical microfilaments that is normally associated with the junctions. Cells in open monolayers treated with CB will not reseal and have an altered filament distribution. These cells do not have a continuous cortical ring.We have used a voltage scanning technique that uses a microelectrode to measure the resistance at selected points along the junction which surrounds a single cell. In untreated, closed monolayers, the junction is heterogeneous with alternating points of high and low conductance. In closed monolayers treated with CB, although there are low conductance points, we have observed an increased frequency of high conductance points that correlates with the change in the overall conductance. The frequency of high conductance points along the junction and the overall conductance both increase with time of exposure to CB.In an effort to understand the molecular basis for the permeability changes induced by EGTA and CB, we have looked for differences in the protein components of the cell membranes of open, closed, and CB-treated MDCK monolayers. This was done by radioiodinating the surface membrane proteins under control and experimental conditions that bring about permeability changes. No significant differences in the labeled protein patterns were found under these conditions. These results suggest that the permeability changes involve only a structural rearrangement of membrane components. In addition we have observed that about 36% of the surface label remains bound to the insoluble cytoskeletons obtained from cells in control and experimental conditions that alter the permeability of the tight junctions. The iodinated proteins attached to the CS include polypeptides with Mr of ≥ 120K daltons as well as peptides with Mr = 56K, 50K, 36K, and 18K daltons.
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  • 34
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 433-445 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: mitogenicity ; Schwann cells ; axons ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Previous studies in this laboratory have shown that membranes derived from dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurites are mitogenic for cultured Schwann cells derived from the same source [Salzer et al (1980): J Cell Biol 84:767-778]. Improved procedures are described for preparing Schwann cells derived from dorsal root ganglia that are highly responsive to various mitogens. Under these conditions, the cells respond not only to the neurite mitogen but also to pituitary extracts, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and cholera toxin that have been shown previously to be good mitogens for Schwannn cells derived from sciatic nerve [Raff et al (1978): Cell 15:813-822], thus reconciling discrepancies in the response of these different Schwann cell preparations to mitogens. Searching for a source of membranes more suitable for biochemical characterization of the neurite mitogen, we found that bovine brain axolemma, prepared by the method of DeVries et al [(1977): Brain Res 147:339-352] is highly mitogenic for Schwann cells. The milotic index of Schwann cells was increased by the addition of axolemma from 0.5%-2% to 30%-50% during 24-h incubation with [3H]thymidine. Half maximal effect was obtained at about 0.4 μg axolemma protein per microwell containing 2-4 × 10 3 cells. The axolemma mitogen appears to be an integral membrane protein that remains bound to the membrane under various ionic conditions but can be extracted in a partially active form with deoxycholate. Like the DRG neurite mitogen, the mitogenic activity of axolemma was abolished by trypsin treatment. Unlike the neurite preparation, however, the mitogenic activity of axolemma was only partially inactivated by heat treatment (60%-70% inactivation). A significant difference between the mitogenic activity of axolemma membranes and neurite membranes is the fact that axolemma membranes fail to stimulate Schwann cell proliferation in a defined, serum-free medium (N-2), whereas neurites show significant mitogenic activity in this medium. These findings indicate a possible difference between DRG neurites and brain axolemma either in the mitogen itself or surface components responsible for recognition between the membranes and the cells.
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  • 35
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 447-459 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: acetylcholinesterase ; ligatin ; membrane-bound lectin ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Ligatin, a lectin that recognizes phosphorylated sugars, has been demonstrated in mammalian tissues to bind specific hydrolases to cell surfaces. Ligatin exists as a filament that can be released from membranes still complexed with its bound hydrolases by treatment of membrane preparations with CaCl2 and/or pH 8.0. The ligatin-hydrolase complexes subsequently can be dissociated with ethyleneglycol-bis(β-amino-ethyl ether) N, N′-tetraacetic acid, resulting in a concurrent depolymerization of the ligatin filament. From membrane preparations of cerebrum, this procedure solubilized ligatin and a membrane-bound acetylcholinesterase (EC 3.1.1.7). Binding of the cosolubilized acetylcholinesterase to ligatin could be demonstrated in vitro by affinity chromatography using the immobilized lectin. Ligatin-hydrolase complexes have been shown to be dissociated by specific phosphorylated sugars (mannose 6-phosphate and glucose 1-phosphate). These sugars were also effective in eluting bound brain acetylcholinesterase from ligatin affinity columns. Analysis of labeled glycitols produced by tritiated borohydride reduction confirmed the presence of phosphorylated sugars on the ligatin-cosolubilized material from brain.
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  • 36
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 461-468 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: neural retina ; ligatin ; adhesion ; phosphooligosaccharides ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Ligatin is a filamentous plasma membrane protein that serves as a baseplate for the attachment of peripheral glycoproteins to the external cell surface. Ligatin can be released from intact, embryonic chick neural retinal cells by treatment with 20 mM Ca++ without adversely affecting their viability. α-Glucose-1-phos phate is also effective in removing ligatin-associated glycoproteins from intact cells. After either of these treatments, the retinal cells seem not to exhibit Ca++ -dependent adhesion for one another. It is thus suggested that ligatin in neural retina may serve as a baseplate for the attachment to the cell surface of glycoproteins active in Ca++-dependent adhesion. The finding that Ca++ serves to protect Ca++-dependent adhesion molecules from digestion by trypsin is discussed in relation to steric constraints on trypsin's accessibility to these adhesion molecules because of their possible binding to arrayed ligatin filaments.
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  • 37
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 469-478 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: neural retina cells ; adhesion ; adhesion calcium effects ; cell binding assay ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The hypothesis that intercellular adhesion can be subdivided into two separable phenomena, an initial recognition event and a subsequent stabilization, is supported by the use of a new cell binding assay that provides a quantitative measure of intercellular binding strengths. Radioactive single cells are brought into contact with cell monolayers at 4°C in sealed compartments. The compartments are inverted and a centrifugal force is then applied tending to dislodge the probe cells from the monolayers. By varying the speed of centrifugation, the force maintaining associations between embryonic chick neural retina cells was determined to be on the order of 10-5 dynes after incubation at 4°C. Brief incubations at 37°C resulted in significant strengthening of the intercellular bond. Using this cell binding assay, neural retina cells were shown to exhibit both a Ca++-independent and a Ca++-dependent mechanism in their initial binding to one another.
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  • 38
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 479-492 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: spectrin domains ; protease-resistant ; erythrocyte ; membrane ; cytoskeleton ; structural repeat ; domain structure ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Mild treatment of human erythrocyte spectrin with trypsin produces discrete intermediate-sized peptides. The effects of buffer composition, enzyme-substrate ratio, temperature, and other experimental parameters on the resulting peptide pattern have been examined. Spectrin is capable of regaining its proteolytic resistance after NaDodSO4-induced denaturation, permitting the use of isolated subunits to study spectrin structure and function. Tryptic digestion of isolated subunits also has greatly facilitated the identification of the subunit origin of the intermediate-sized peptides. Isolated subunits could also be recombined to form functional units similar but not identical to the native dimeric form of the molecule. Spectrin apparently is composed of numerous large protease-resistant regions or domains connected by small protease sensitive segments. The structural integrity and accessibility of these sites is minimally affected by oligomeric state or proteolytic digestion conditions. The similarities of sizes, isoelectric points, and amino acid compositions of many intermediate-size peptides from areas of both subunits suggest that at least part of spectrin's structure may have evolved via replication of a single gene. A possible structural repeat of approximately 50,000 daltons is hypothesized.
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  • 39
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 493-505 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: actin ; cytoskeleton ; red cell ; erythrocyte ; size distribution ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Reports on the polymeric state of actin in the red cell have been diverse. We have used phalloidin to stabilize the actin in erythrocyte ghosts prior to extraction in low ionic strength media. A mild proteolytic digestion and Sepharose 4B gel filtration enable an F-actin polymer to be isolated in pure form [1]. Detailed size analysis of this polymer in a range of experiments suggests that actin exists in the erythrocyte principally as a polymer of 100 nm length composed of 30 monomers in a double helical chain 15 monomers long with an estimated molecular weight of 1.3 × 106 daltons.
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  • 40
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 507-513 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: benzo(a)pyrene ; macromolecular binding ; carcinogen ; nuclear proteins ; histones ; cytoplasmic proteins ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Hamster embryo cells metabolize benzo(a)pyrene to derivatives that covalently modify nuclear macromolecules including proteins. Not all proteins are modified to the same extent nor by the same metabolites. In particular, a protein of apparent molecular weight 32,000 is highly modified by derivatives of trans-9,10-dihydro-9,10-dihydroxy B(a)P. This protein is shown here to be preferentially lost from nuclei during purification by centrifugation through high molarity sucrose solutions followed by osmotic shock. It does not appear to be a cytoplasmic contaminant, but shares many properties of an abundant protein from Xenopus laevis oocytes, nucleoplasmin.
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  • 41
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982) 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 42
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 515-538 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: cell-cell interactions ; neoplastic transformation ; cAMP ; metastasis ; phosphodiesterase inhibitors ; carcinogenesis ; growth control ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have demonstrated that confluent monolayers of the mouse fibroblast cell line C3H/10T1/2 (10T1/2) have the ability to cause reversible growth inhibition of cocultured transformed cells. This was first demonstrated for de novo transformed cells and later extended to established cell lines of proven oncogenicity in vivo. This growth inhibition could be increased by growing the 10T1/2 cells to high density in increasing concentrations of serum or by elevating intracellular concentrations of cAMP using inhibitors of phosphodiesterase (PDE). These manipulations, which in cocultures of nontransformed and transformed cells caused complete inhibition of tumor cell growth, had no effect on growth rate or saturation density of either ceil type when cultured alone, demonstrating the cooperative nature of this phenomenon. This cooperation could not be produced by transfer of culture medium, demonstrating the requirement for intimate cell contact. Inhibition of the formation of transformed foci of cells in these mixed cultures was accompanied by a decrease in the incorporation of labeled thymidine into these cultures; the kinetics of this inhibition and recovery suggested a rapidly reversible effect on cell cycle transit times. The potent inhibitor of cAMP PDE, Ro 20-1724 induced dose dependent increases in intracellular cAMP in both nontransformed and in transformed cells. However, at a concentration of 10-4 M Ro 20-1724, which inhibited tumor cell growth in mixed cultures, cAMP was elevated 30-fold in nontransformed versus only 3-fold in transformed cells.The inhibitory effects of PDE inhibitors on tumor growth have been extended to an in vivo model system, utilizing Lewis lung carcinoma cells growing as metastases in the lungs of C57B1 mice. In these mice, inoculated intravenously with a single cell suspension of Lewis lung cells, the formation of lung metastases was dramatically decreased by the twice daily administration of either isobutylmethylxanthine or Ro 20-1724; PDE inhibitors were shown to be active in vitro. The latter compound, which showed highest activity in vitro, was also substantially more potent in vivo as an inhibitor of lung tumor colony formation and doubled the life span of the tumor bearing animals. Cell cycle analysis of lung tumor colonies by the labeled mitosis method showed that both phosphodiesterase inhibitors caused a prolonged G1 phase in the cell cycle but failed to influence other phases. Although detailed analysis of host tissues is not complete, prolonged treatment with these drugs caused no statistically significant weight loss or changes in counts of red or white blood cells indicating a selective growth inhibition of transformed cells at these doses. Studies to determine the mechanism of the cellular communication and the nature of the signal are in progress.
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  • 43
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 17-26 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: methylglyoxal bis-(guanylhydrazone) ; cell cycle ; RNA synthesis ; RNA stability ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Concentrations of methylglyoxal bis-(guanylhydrazone) (mGBG) that inhibited serum-stimulated BALB/c-3T3 cells in late G1 caused a marked inhibition of 3H-leucine incorporation during a 20-min incubation. No decrease was observed in the incorporation of 3H-uridine during a 20-min incubation; however, the amount of acid-insoluble 3H-uridine in mGBG-treated cultures was decreased when the incubation period was longer than 20 min. The amount of the decrease in the accumulation of incorporated 3H-uridine was directly proportional to the length of the incorporation time. Between 10 and 12 h after quiescent BALB/C-3T3 cells were serum-stimulated in mGBG no additional 3H-uridine was accumulated. The stability of the incorporated 3H-uridine, as determined by acid-insoluble radioactivity remaining after the addition of actinomycin D, was less in cells cultured in mGBG. Exogenous spermine or spermidine reversed the inhibition of 3H-uridine accumulation in acid-insoluble material produced by mGBG as well as the decrease in stability of the incorporated 3H-uridine in acid-insoluble material. The effects of mGBG on both the incorporation of 3H-uridine and the stability of the incorporated 3H-uridine can apparently be accounted for by an effect on ribosomal RNA.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: membrane sidedness ; regulatory subunits ; ejaculated sperm ; photoaffinity ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The photoaffinity probe (32P)8-N3 cAMP was used to label the cAMP binding proteins in washed ejaculated human sperm. Three saturable binding proteins were photolabeled in both intact and disrupted cells with apparent molecular weights of 55,000, 49,000 and 40,000 daltons corresponding to the regulatory subunits of type II and type I cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAMP-PK) and to an endogenous proteolytic product of the regulatory subunits, respectively. Photoincorporation in the three proteins could be totally blocked by preincubating the cells with cAMP. Cell-free seminal plasma was found to be free of detectable (12P) 8-N3 cAMP-binding proteins. The 8-N3 cAMP was also effective in stimulating endogenous cAMP-PK activity in intact and disrupted sperm. A substantial amount of (32P) 8-N3 cAMP binding to types I and II regulatory subunits and cAMP-PK activity was detected on washed intact cells, intact cells. Intact cell bound 1.80 pmol of (32P) 8-N3 cAMP/mg protein and had cAMP-PK activity of 824 units/108 cells. Disrupted cells bound 3.95 pmol (32P) 8-N3 cAMP mg protein and had a cAMP-PK activity of 2,206 units/108 cells. The data presented support the concept of two classes of cAMP receptors being differentially available to externally added (32P) 8-N3 cAMP and proteases. Cellular membrane integrity and membrane sidedness are discussed as possible explanations for the observation reported.
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  • 45
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 93-103 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: cyclic AMP ; BALB/c-3T3 cells ; mid G1 ; DNA synthesis ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The stimulation of DNA synthesis in quiescent, density-arrested BALB/c-3T3 cells by platelet-derived growth factor in plasma-supplemented medium was inhibited by the presence of isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX) and cholera toxin, although neither IBMX or cholera toxin when used alone inhibited the stimulation of DNA synthesis. The cells were reversibly inhibited in mid G1 at a point 6 hr prior to the initiation of DNA synthesis. The inhibition of cell cycle traverse was associated with a 10-15 fold increase in cellular cyclic AMP concentration over basal levels. The reversal of this inhibition by removal of IBMX was correlated with a dramatic decrease in cyclic AMP levels. The traverse of late G1 and the initiation of DNA synthesis after release from the cholera toxin and IBMX inhibition was dependent on the presence of plasma in the medium. Either somatomedin C (10-20 ng/ml) or insulin (10-6-10-5 M) completely replaced the plasma requirement for late G1 progression and entry into S phase. Once the inhibited cells were released from the IBMX and cholera toxin block a subsequent increase in cyclic AMP did not prevent entry into S phase. The presence of cholera toxin alone inhibited the stimulation of human dermal fibroblasts. The elevation of intracellular cyclic AMP levels in the human dermal fibroblasts by cholera toxin was two to three fold greater than that found in the BALB/c-3T3 cells in the presence of cholera toxin and IBMX.
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  • 46
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 205-222 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: epidermal growth factor ; immunoautoradiography ; down regulation ; membrane phosphoproteins ; transferring ; growth hormone ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have reported previously [6] that epidermal growth factor (EGF)-induced down regulation of EGF receptors in normal rat kidney (NRK) cells results in a selective decrease in the in vitro EGF-dependent 32P-phosphorylation of two membrane phosphoproteins of Mr I70K and Mr I50K. In this report, we further characterized the modulation of 32P-phosphorylation of the 170K- and 150K-dalton proteins by down regulation with EGF in NRK cells.While EGF binding to its receptors was a necessary condition to induce loss of EGF-dependent phosphorylation of the 170K- and 150K-dalton proteins, it was not sufficient. Thus, reduction in the temperature of the incubation of cells with EGF from 37°C to 4°C abolished the loss of EGF-dependent phosphorylation of the 170K- and 150K-dalton membrane proteins. When EGF was removed from the medium the EGF-dependent phosphorylation of the 170K- and l50K-dalton proteins was quickly replenished; by 3 hr one-half of the “down regulated” phosphorylation was restored. All EGF-dependent phosphorylating capacity of the 170K- and l50K-dalton protein bands returned by 6 hr after removal of the growth factor. The loss of EGF-dependent phosphorylation of the 170K- and I50K-dalton proteins occurred at physiological EGF concentrations (0.25-25 ng/ml) that span the concentration range which is mitogenic for NRK cells. Exposure of confluent nondividing NRK cells to 1 ng/ml EGF, followed by incubation for 5 hr at 37°C. led to a 50% reduction in the EGF-dependent phosphorylation of the 170K- and 150K-dalton proteins. Maximal reduction (∼95%) in the EGF-dependent phosphorylation of the 170K- and 150K-dalton proteins was noted with 10 ng/ml EGF for 5 hr. The EGF-induced loss of EGF-dependent phosphorylation was specific: several other growth factors did not produce phosphorylation loss of the 170K-
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  • 47
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 231-240 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: nerve growth factor ; alpha subunit ; neuronal binding ; NGF receptors ; dorsal root ganglia ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The effect of the α subunit of the 7S-NGF on the binding of β-NGF to its two classes of sites on target cells has been studied. The presence of μM concentrations of α-NGF causes the displacement of 125I-β-NGF from one class of sites on dissociated dorsal root ganglia neurons from stage E9 chicken embryos. At O.1 nM 125I-β-NGF, increasing α-NGF concentrations produce a monotonic displacement curve with half-maximal displacement occurring at 10 μM α-NGF. The affinity and number of sites of the 125I-β-NGF displaced by α-NGF are similar to those of β-NGF that binds to the higher affinity (site I) receptors. The binding to the lower affinity class of sites (site II) is not affected-by concentrations of α-NGF up to 30 μM. This modulation of 125I-β-NGF binding does not occur with equivalent concentrations of serum albumin. No detectable neuronal binding of 125I-β-NGF was found, suggesting that the mechanism does not involve direct competition for receptor sites. The dissociation constant for the α-β complex is in the μM range, and formation of this complex in solution can thus compete with the process of 125I-β-NGF binding to neurons. A model accounting for these observations includes binding of the α-β complex to the lower affinity but not to the higher affinity sites. We conclude that there are differences in the specificity of the two classes of receptors.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: glucocorticoid receptors ; protein-DNA interactions ; transcriptiotial regulation ; steroid hormone action ; mouse mammary tumor virus ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Glucocorticoid hormones selectively stimulate the rate of transcription of integrated mammary tumor virus (MTV) sequences in infected rat hepatoma cells. Using two independent assays, we find that purified rat liver glucocorticoid receptor protein binds specifically to at least four widely separated regions on pure MTV proviral DNA. One of these specific binding domains, which itself contains at least two distinct receptor binding sites, resides within a fragment of viral DNA that maps 110-449 bp upstream of the promoter for MTV RNA synthesis. Three other binding domains lie downstream of the promoter and within the MTV primary transcription unit. Restriction fragments bearing separate binding domains have been introduced into cultured cells; transformants have been recovered in which the introduced fragments arc expressed under glucocorticoid control. Thus, it appears that this assay will be useful for assessing the biological significance of the receptor binding sites detected in vitro.
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  • 49
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 267-274 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: DNA sequence ; repeated sequences ; in vitro transcription ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The 17,180 base-pair Eco-RI-C fragment of Epstein-Barr virus has been sequenced in its entirety. This same fragment has also been analyzed for RNA polymerase II promoters, which are active in a soluble in vitro assay. These data are compared to the availability of predicted open reading frames and other potential nucleotide signals associated with transcription. In addition, the DNA sequence of a number of previously undetected repeated DNA sequences from this and several nearby regions of the viral genome are reported.
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  • 50
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 249-257 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: epidermal growth factor ; protein kinase ; epidermoid cancer cells ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Epidermal growth factor (EGF), which stimulates tyrosine-specific protein kinase activity both in vivo and in vitro, inhibits proliferation of A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells. After mutagenesis clonal cell lines that were resistant to the growth inhibitory effects of EGF were selected. All six variants examined contained decreased EGF-stimulated protein kinase. The number of EGF receptors in variant cells decreased in parallel with EGF-stimulated protein kinase activity so that the specific activity of EGF-stimulated protein kinase per EGF receptor remained constant in variant cell lines with up to tenfold reductions in both activities. This result suggests that both EGF- binding and kinase activities reside in the same or closely coupled molecules. The effect of EGF on growth of two resistant variants was examined in detail. Clone 29 contains ∼50% and clone 4 contains ∼20% of the EGF-stimulated protein kinase activity of the parental A431 cell line. In serum-supplemented medium, EGF stimulated proliferation of clone 29 but did not affect growth of clone 4. In a l:1 mixture of DME and F-12 medium without scrum, EGF caused both clone 29 and clone 4 to grow as well as in 10% serum. These variants, which were selected for resistance to the growth inhibitory effects of EGF, thus exhibit a strong mitogenic response to EGF. This result suggests that resistance to the growth inhibitory effect of EGF may involve both a decrease in EGF-stimulated protein kinase and an alteration in the response pathway.
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  • 51
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 259-265 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: cytoplasmic RNA ; messenger RNA ; 3T3 cells ; C3HEF ; SV40 ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A cDNA-cloned library was prepared from mRNA synthesized by SV40-transformed mouse cells. Eleven cDNA clones were selected based on their ability to hybridize higher levels of mRNA in SV40-transformed 3T3 cells than in 3T3 cells. These cDNA clones were employed to screen the steady-state levels of cytoplasmic RNAs in a wide variety of viral (SV40, polyoma, adenovirus, and Rous sarcoma virus) and nonviral (methylcholanthrene, embryonal carcinoma) transformed cell lines. Two of the cDNA clones - A17 and 104 - detected greater than 40-100-fold higher levels of mRNA in all the transformed cell lines tested when compared to nontransformed cells (3T3, C3HEF). The levels of mRNA complementary to these two cDNAs were regulated in a temperature-sensitive fashion (87-100-fold) in both SV40tsA- and RSV ts-src-transformed murine cell lines. These two cDNA clones detected greater than 100-fold, higher levels of complementary RNA derived from SV40 tumor tissue than in normal mouse liver. RNA species complementary to cDNA clones A17 or 104 were not detected in either actively growing nontransformed cells or in serum-stimulated 3T3 cells. The abundance levels of mRNAs detected by these two cDNA clones appear to be regulated 100-fold or greater by the transformed state, independent of the transforming agent. The higher levels of these RNA species detected in transformed mouse cells appear not to be solely regulated by the state of growth of nontransformed cells.
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  • 52
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: monoclonal antibodies ; McDonough feline sarcoma virus ; viral oncogene v-fms ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The McDonough strain of feline sarcoma virus (SM-FeSV) contains a viral oncogene, v-fms, transduced from cat cellular genetic sequences designated c-fms. Monoclonal antibodies reactive to antigenic determinants encoded by v-fms were prepared by immunizing rats with live, syngeneic SM-FeSV-transformed cells, and fusing splenic lymphocytes from a tumor-bearing animal with cultured rat myeloma cells. Culture supernatants from hybrids producing antibodies to epitopes encoded by v-fms were identified by immunoprecipitation of radiolabeled polypeptides from SM-FeSV-transformed mink cells. Four positive hybrids were cloned twice in soft agar, established as stable lines, and grown in defined serum-free medium to facilitate purification of homogeneous antibodies. The monoclonal antibodies were used to assay SM-FeSV-specific products by “immunoblotting” of elcctrophoretically separated proteins, and by fixed-cell immunofluorescence.
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  • 53
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982) 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 54
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 293-304 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: reverse-transcription ; strand-displacement synthesis ; heteroduplex DNA ; DNA H-structures ; proviral integration ; homologous recombination ; transduction ; recombination models ; RNA tumor viruses ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The avian retroviruses - and probably other retroviruses as well - undergo a variety of recombinational events with relatively high efficiency. An understanding of the molecular basis of these events should provide insight into the important biological properties these agents exhibit when they become integrated into somatic or germ-line host cells, when they exchange genetic information among themselves, or when they transduce host cell genes. In this article we review molecular models for homologous recombination, against a background of the other types of recombination events that arc typical of these viruses. It seems probable that the retroviruses will provide useful models for analysis of a variety of DNA rearrangements known to occur in eukaryotic cells.
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  • 55
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: hepatitis B virus ; persistent viral infection ; HBV-DNA ; chimpanzee HBV carriers ; molecular hybridization ; supercoiled HBV-DNA ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: In chimpanzee hepatitis B virus (HBV) carriers, the molecular mechanism for viral persistence has been examined by analyzing the properties of viral DNA molecules in liver and serum. Two extrachromosomal HBV-DNA molecules migrating on Southern blots at 4.0 kb and 2.3 kb were observed in chimpanzee liver DNA. There was no evidence for integration of HBV sequences into the host genome. The HBV-DNA molecule which migrated at 4.0 kb position represents a full-length “nicked,” relaxed circular form, and the DNA molecules migrating at 2.3 kb position represents a supercoiled form of the HBV genome. Evidence for supercoiled HBV-DNA in serum was obtained by production of the relaxed circular intermediate upon digestion of Dane particle DNA with specific nucleases S1 and Bal 31. A possible role of these two extrachromosomal HBV-DNA molecules in the biology of hepatitis B virus infection and the mechanism for viral persistence arc discussed.
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  • 56
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 305-313 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: anti-iodiotypic antibody ; thyrotropin ; receptor ; thyroid stimulating antibody ; Graves disease ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We raised an antihuman thyrotropin anti-idiotypic antibody and showed that it was active at the thyrotropin receptor. Thus this antibody inhibited 125I b-TSH binding to thyroid plasma membranes, stimulated adenylate cyclase activity through a guanyl nucleotide-dependent mechanism, increased radioiodide entry rate into isolated porcine thyroid follicular cells, and induced such cultured cells to organize into follicles. All these parameters are typical of thyrotropin action. This work raises the possibility that thyroid stimulating antibodies that cause the hyperthyroidism of Graves disease may be, at least in some patients, anti-thyrotropin anti-idiotypic antibodies. It also offers a novel method whereby antireceptor antibodies used in the isolation and characterization of the receptor may be raised from ligands.
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  • 57
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 315-332 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 58
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 349-362 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: synthetic peptide antiserum ; retrovirus ; v-mos ; Moloney murine sarcoma virus (MuSV) ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have used antisera against synthetic peptides to identify and characterize a 37,000 dalton v-mos encoded protein (p37mos) in cells transformed by M-MuSV 124. p37mos, a phosphoprotein, comprises only about 0.0005% of total cellular protein in cell lines transformed by M-MuSV 124. NIH 3T3 cells acutely infected with M-MuSV 124, however, contain 30-100-fold more p37mos. These elevated levels of p37mos correlate with striking morphological changes and cell death in the acutely infected cell population. Using the antipeptide antisera, we have extended the analysis of v-mos proteins to include several other MuSV variants that contain a similar v-mos gene to M-MuSV 124. With the exception of P85, the gag-mos fusion protein from ts110 MuSV, the v-mos gene of these variants is expressed as a 35,000-37,000 dalton protein (size depending on the particular virus).
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  • 59
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 333-347 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: in vitro transcription ; HSV-1 ; regulation ; RNA polymerase II ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We used partially purified RNA polymerase II from uninfected (Pol II) and from herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infected HEp-2 cells (Pol II-H) to transcribe HSV-1 DNA in vitro. Gel electrophoretic analysis of the products produced from native HSV-1 DNA yielded weight average chain lengths of 4.0 and 3.5 kb for the Pol II and Pol II-H products, respectively. Blot hybridization analyses of the HSV DNA transcripts showed that both enzymes transcribed RNA from essentially all regions of the genome. However, Pol II preferentially transcribed regions coding for the immediate-early or alpha mRNAs, whereas Pol II-H preferentially copied regions coding for the early (β) and late (γ) gene products. Transcriptional analyses of the cloned HSV-1 Bam HI-Q fragment (containing the thymidine kinase (TK) gene) and its subfragments showed that (1) the major transcripts produced by Pol II-H were distinctly different from those produced by Pol II; (2) Pol II and Pol II-H utilized different promoters for the synthesis of major transcripts; (3) both enzymes produced three minor transcripts that were partially overlapping and in opposite direction to the TK gene; and (4) only Pol II-H initiated transcription from the TK promoter. In contrast, both Pol II and Pol II-H generated an identical set of transcripts from an adenovirus 2 early region DNA fragment. The sizes of the products suggest that RNA processing may be occurring in vitro. These results show that HSV-1 infection alters the in vitro transcriptional specificity of RNA polymerase II and demonstrate that this system should be useful for studying in vitro the regulation of gene transcription.
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  • 60
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 363-381 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: basement membrane ; extracellular matrix ; muscle ; structural glycoprotein ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have isolated a major glycoprotein that appears to be associated with rat skeletal muscle basement membrane. We determined that the glycoprotein was part of the muscle cell surface complex when we found it to be enriched in preparations of muscle ghosts. We isolate the glycoprotein from homogenized muscle preextracted with 4 M and 8 M urea. It elutes as a major component in the presence of 8 M urea/50 mM 2-mercaptoethanol. Its apparent molecular weight on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels is 130,000. Amino acid analysis indicates that it is not a collagen but that it does contain small amounts of hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine. There may be collagenous domains in the glycoprotein molecule, for it is cleaved into three fragments by purified bacterial collagenase. Immunoperoxidase staining confirms that the 130,000-dalton protein is localized at the surface of adult skeletal muscle cells. It is probably a general basement membrane-associated glycoprotein because we found material immunologically cross-reactive with the muscle glycoprotein in basement membrane regions of kidney, liver, brain, and small intestine. We have shown the glycoprotein to be distinct from fibronectin, laminin, and types I, III, IV, and V collagens in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays.
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  • 61
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982) 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 62
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 383-394 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: epidermal growth factor ; receptors ; endocytosis ; cell surface ; response kinetics ; compartmentation ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have investigated the stimulation of fluid phase endocytosis by epidermal growth factor (EGF) in normal human fibroblasts using 125I-labeled polyvinylpyrrolidone (125I-PVP) as a fluid phase marker. We found that EGF initially induced a thereefold increase in the rate of 125I-PVP uptake. This initial burst of fluid uptake terminated within 10 min. Thereafter, the rate of fluie uptake in EGF-treated cells was approximately 40% higher than in control cells. To identify the cellular site of EGF action in stimulating fluid phase endocytosis, we examined the kinetics of the induction of this response as well as the kinetics of cell surface binding and internalization of 125I-EGF. Although there was no detectable lag between binding of EGF to the cell surface and its internalization, the kinetics of the two processes were quite different. Significantly, the kinetics of induction of 125I-PVP uptake matched the kinetics of binding of 125I-EGF to its cell surface receptors, indicating that the signal for the increase in fluid phase endocytosis is generated at the cell surface. To determine if EGF-stimulated fluid phase endocytosis was related to EGF-stimulated endocytosis of its own receptor, we compared the EGF dose dependency and time course of the two processes. Although the stimulated endocytosis of the EGF receptor was not saturable with respect to the concentration of EGF used, the stimulation of fluid phase endocytosis was half maximal at an EGF concentration of 1 ng/ml and saturated at a concentration of 5 ng/ml. Also, the stimulation of fluid phase endocytosis was sevenfold greater initially after adding EGF than after a 30-min continuous incubation with the hormone, whereas the enhanced clearance of the EGF receptor did not change during this time period. We conclude that the EGF-stimulated increase in fluid phase endocytosis is not directly coupled to EGF-stimulated endocytosis of its own receptor but instead to a separate signal generated at the cell surface.
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  • 63
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 1-78 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 64
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 79-108 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 65
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 109-185 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 66
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 71-80 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: aminoglycoside ; fluorescent paromomycin ; human fibroblasts ; lysosomes ; endocytosis ; exocytosis ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Human fetal lung fibroblasts grown in the presence of dansyl-paromomycin (DNS-Pm), a fluorescent derivative of the aminoglycoside antibiotic, paromomycin, probably accumulate DNS-Pm in the lysosomes. The intracellular concentration of DNS-Pm is proportional to the extracellular concentration and to the length of time cells are exposed to the compound. The accumulation of DNS-Pm by human fibroblasts continued to increase for several days, reaching a saturation after 7 days. The kinetic data are consistent with the establishment of a steady state in the cell between fluid-phase pinocytosis and exocytosis of DNS-Pm. About 80% of the intracellular DNS-Pm was released in 24 hr when fresh medium without the analogue was added. The residual 20% remained within the cells, suggesting that it may be irreversibly bound to the lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, or ribosonius. The uptake of paromomycin by cells in culture may be a useful means to study error propagation during growth and lifespan of cells in vitro.
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  • 67
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982) 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 68
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: acute leukemia virus ; transforming gene ; DNA sequencing ; LTRs, nucleotides ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Avian mycloblastosis virus (AMV) is a replication-defective acute leukemia virus, requiring a helper virus to provide the viral proteins essential for synthesis of new infectious virus. The genome of the AMV has undergone a sequence substitution in which a portion of the region normally coding for the “env” protein has been replaced by chicken cellular sequences. These latter sequences are essential for the transforming activity of the virus. We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of this region. Examination of the AMV oncogenic sequence revealed an open reading frame starting with the initiation codon ATG within the acquired cellular sequences and terminating with the triplet TAG at a point 33 nucleotides into helper viral sequences to the right of helper-viral-cellular junction. The stretch of 795 nucleotides would code for a protein of 265 amino acids with a molecular weight of 30,000 daltons. The eleven amino acids at the carboxy terminus of such a protein would be derived from the env gene of helper virus.
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  • 69
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: electron microscopy ; plasma membrane ; lymphoma cells ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Plasma membrane was isolated from the mouse T lymphoma cell line WEHI-22 using four different methods of cell disruption followed by centrifugal fractionation. Disruption by nitrogen cavitation or by shearing with a cell pump produced plasma membrane vesicles of similar buoyant density (1.10 g/ml) and morphological appearance. Few C-type virus particles were present. Cell disruption with 2% Tween-40 produced membrane vesicles of similar morphology but lower density (1.09 g/ml). All of the above preparations resulted in vesicles with aggregated intramembranous particles after freeze fracture. Microvesiculation with a sublytic concentration of a lysophosphatidylcholine analog (ET-12-H) (0.0032% w/v) produced small membrane vesicles which could be isolated without differential centrifugation. However, these had a slightly higher density than vesicles prepared by cavitation or shearing and were co ntaminated by virus particles. Unlike the other preparations, vesicles prepared with ET-I2-H had dispersed intramembranous particles. The enzyme γ-glutamyl transferase was enriched from 20- to 45-fold in the membrane preparations and proved a suitable plasma membrane marker for these cells whose 5′-nucleotidase content is very low.
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  • 70
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 113-126 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: desmosome ; macula adhaerens ; cell junction ; cell adhesion ; Concanavalin A ; glycoprotein ; postembedding labeling ; thin-section labeling ; glycol methacrylate ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Correlated ultrastructural and biochemical methods were used to identify and localize Concanavalin A (Con A) receptors in the desmosomes of bovine epidermis. Specific carbohydrate residues were labeled with ferritin-Con A in thin sections of tissue embedded in a hydrophilic resin. Quantitative mapping of ferritin distribution in labeled desmosomes revealed that Con A receptors are localized in the intercellular zone and concentrated along the desmosomal midline or central dense stratum. Labeling was almost entirely absent when sections were treated with ferritin-Con A in the presence of 0.1 M α-methyl mannoside, a hapten-inhibitor of Con A. “Whole” desmosomes and desmosomal intercellular regions (desmosomal “cores”) were purified from bovine muzzle epidermis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis reveals a limited number of major desmosomal protein constituents. Certain of these are glycoproteins and are greatly enriched in the core fraction. Almost all the desmosomal glycoproteins are intensely labeled when electrophoretic gels of whole desmosome or core fractions are exposed to fluorescent Concanavalin A.
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  • 71
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: monoclonal antibody ; A431 ; EGF receptor ; chromosomal location ; internalization ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A monoclonal antibody of the IgG class, EGFR1, has been isolated using cells of the epidermoid carcinoma line A431 as immunogen. The A431 antigen recognized by EGFR1 has an apparent molecular weight of approximately 175,000, is a cell-surface molecule which can be specifically cross-linked to EGF, exhibits an EGF-stimulated protein kinase activity, binds to EGFR1 in a number of human cell lines to a degree which parallels EGF binding, and shows EGF-dependent internalization in A431 cells and human fibroblasts. We therefore conclude that EGFR1 is directed against an antigenic site on the human EGF receptor. EGFR1 is not mitogenic for human fibroblasts and does not inhibit EGF binding under a variety of assay conditions. The characterization of EGFR1 has allowed the unambiguous assignment of the structural gene for the human EGF receptor to chromosome 7. Preliminary results suggest that a convenient method for isolating a range of anti-EGF receptor monoclonal antibodies can be developed, based on a hybridoma supernatant screening assay in which positive supernatants bind selectively to a human-mouse cell hybrid containing human chromosome 7.
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  • 72
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 163-176 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: epidermal growth factor ; asialoglycoprotein receptor ; ricin ; diphtheria toxin ; toxic conjugates ; hybrid toxins ; chimeric toxins ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have constructed hybrid proteins in which the toxic A chains of ricin or diptheria toxin have been linked to either asialofetuin, fetuin, or epidermal growth factor (EGF). Both ASF-RTA and ASF-DTA are potent toxins on cultured rat hepatocytes, cells that display the asialoglycoprotein receptor. Toxicity of these two compounds is restricted to hepatocytes and can be blocked by asialoglycoproteins but not the native glycoproteins or asialoagalactoglycoprotein derivatives, indicating that the toxicity of the conjugates is mediated by the hepatic asialoglycoprotein receptor. The EGF-RTA conjugate is an extremely potent toxin on cells that can bind the hormone, but is only poorly effective on cells that are unable to bind EGF. The EGF-DTA conjugate, in contrast, is unable to kill 3T3 cells and is at least two orders of magnitude less effective than EGF-RTA on A431 cells, a cell line with 1-2 × 106 EGF receptors per cell. However, when EGF-RTA and EGF-DTA were tested on primary liver hepatocyte cultures, which were susceptible to both ASF-RTA and ASF-DTA, both EGF conjugates were potent toxins. Sensitivity of the hepatocyte cultures to ricin toxicity increases slightly during a 52-hr culture period. In contrast, sensitivity to EGF-RTA and ASF-RTA decline dramatically during this period. Receptors for both ligands remain plentiful on the cell surface during this time.
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  • 73
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: N-formyl peptide receptor ; photoaffinity labeling ; polymorphonuclear leukocytes ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Quantitative analysis of ligand-occupied receptor interactions with elements of the cytoskeleton and with intracellular compartments requires a sensitive and simple method of identifying the receptor-ligand complex in living cells. Toward this goal, we have prepared a photoactivatable arylazide derivative of the chemotactic peptide N-formyl-Nle-Leu-Phe-Nle-Tyr-Lys, which can be radiolabeled to high specific activity with 125I. This derivative was biologically active as judged by its ability to elicit superoxide anion production by human PMNL at nanomolar concentrations (ED50 ∼ 0.7 nM). When incubated at 0°C with whole PMNL, radioactive ligand became specifically and saturably associated with a 60-70,000-dalton species (as assessed by SDS-PAGE) after exposure to UV light. Addition of 10-100-fold excess of unlabeled parent or unlabeled azidopeptide derivative completely blocked uptake into this species. Approximately 20-40% of the available surface receptor-binding sites were covalently labeled under these conditions. Subcellular fractionation of the labeled cells on sucrose gradients after homogenization showed that the labeled species was primarily associated with plasma membrane-rich fractions. The labeled receptor could be completely solubilized with Triton X-100 in a form which eluted as a single species with a Stoke's radius of less than 50 Å on Sepharose 4B columns. In addition, the solubilized receptor-ligand complex bound specifically to wheat germ agglutinin, indicating that it is probably a glycoprotein. The ability to label the receptor in living PMNL with a high efficiency should facilitate the study of receptor dynamics and receptor physiochemical properties in this system.
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  • 74
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: ligand-receptor interaction ; neutrophils ; cellular response ; fluorescein, peptides ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have compared the kinetics of the responses of neutrophils to the kinetics of ligand-receptor interaction and internalization, using as a model ligand the fluorcsceinated hexapeptide N-CHO-Nle-Leu-Phe-Nle-Tyr-Lys-Fluorescein (Nle, norleucine). Cellular responses, ie, membrane depolarization, enzyme (elastase) secretion, and superoxide anion (O2-) generation, are all initiated within 10 sec of the exposure of cells to stimulus. In the cases of membrane depolarization and secretion (in cytochalasin B-treated cells), full responses are elicited by binding which occurs within 15 sec of peptide addition. Ligand binding and internalization have been analyzed over the same time frame with new spectroscopic techniques. The association of ligand and receptor is monitored using an antibody to fluorcscein. The antibody to fluorescein specifically quenches the ligand which is in solution, but receptor-bound ligand is inaccessible to the antibody. The internalization of the receptor-bound ligand is monitored by the accessibility of the fluoresceinated peptide to quenching by an external pH change (7.4 → 4.0). Ligand which is either outside or on the cell surface is instantaneously quenched while intracellular peptide (or intracellular fluorescein derived from fluorescein diacetate) is only slowly quenched. No internalization is observed until 1 min after binding begins and internalization proceeds at a rate of up to 5,000 receptors/min/cell following a near optimal stimulatory ligand concentration (∼ 1 nM) while the occupied receptors are being cleared from the surface. A comparison of the kinetics of internalization and the cellular responses suggests that internalization of the ligand is too slow to be involved in the triggering of the cellular responses.
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  • 75
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 37-47 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: glycoprotein ; chromatography ; high performance liquid chromatography separation ; glycopeptides ; N-linked oligosaccharides ; vesicular stomaritis virus ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A method is presented for separation of tryptic glycopeptides-containing oligosaccharides of the N-asparagine-linked type. High performance liquid Chromatography (HPLC) of glycopeptides on a C18 reverse-phase system eluted with a gradient of 0%-50% acetonitrile in 0.1 M NaPO4 pH 2.2 resolves the two major glycosylation sites from the envelope glycoprotein (G) of vesicular stomatitis virus. Glycopeptides containing N-linked oligosaccharides of the complex type coelute with those containing N-linked oligosaccharides of the neutral, high mannose type, indicating that separation is based upon peptide rather than carbohydrate composition. The contribution of the carbohydrate component to glycopeptide elution, as determined by cleavage of the high mannose oligosaccharides with endo-β-Nacetylglucosaminidase H, is that of a significant, but minor, decrease in peptide retention time. Comparison of the tryptic glycopeptide profiles of G isolated from both wild type and mutant strains of VSV illustrates the rapid, reproducible, and quantitative nature of the technique. Through HPLC analysis of appropriately treated glycopeptides, it is possible to explore both the nature and extent of glycosylation at individual sites in glycoproteins in a single step.
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  • 76
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: exocytosis ; secretion ; synexin ; calcium-binding protein ; adrenal medulla ; chromaffin granule ; stimulus-secretion coupling ; membrane fusion ; arachidonic acid ; trifluoperazine ; erythrosin B ; phenothiazines ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Synexin was isolated from bovine liver and found to aggregate adrenal chromaffin granules in the same Ca2+-dependent manner as previously described for adrenal synexin. The chromaffin granule aggregating activity of liver synexin was blocked in vitro by the addition of an antibody prepared to the 47,000 molecular weight band extracted from an SDS gel of an adrenal medullary synexin preparation. Chromaffin granules aggregated by synexin fused when exposed to cis-unsaturated fatty acids at concentrations comparable to those released from phospholipids by stimulated secretory cells. The synexin-induced aggregation reaction was blocked by Erythrosin B, a common food coloring, and by the phenothiazine antipsychotics trifluoperazine and promethazine. The aggregation and fusion of chromaffin granules thus appears to be a useful model system for studying synexin from diverse tissues and for testing pharmacologically or texicologically active substances for effects on secretory systems.
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  • 77
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982) 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 78
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 121-133 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: metallothionein ; zinc ; xeroderma pigmentosum ; human fibroblasts ; ultraviolet radiation ; gene repair ; liquid holding recovery ; transcription unit mapping ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The ubiquitous, low-molecular-weight, thiol-rich, metal-binding protein, metallothionein (MT), can be induced in cultured normal human fibroblasts (NF) and xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells by exposure to ZnCl2. Both NF and XP cells tolerate up to 200 μM ZnCl2 in the growth medium. Upon addition of ZnCl2 (200 μM) to monolayer cultures, both NF and XP cells showed similar kinetics for the induction of MT synthesis: Within 7 hours the MT synthesis rate rose from a low, marginally detectable rate to a maximal rate at least 50-fold greater than the basal rate. The induction of MT synthesis in both cell types was inhibited by actinomycin D (5 μg/ml), indicating that the induction process is controlled at the level of transcription. Exposure of NF or XP cells to far ultraviolet light (UV) followed by induction with ZnCl2 resulted in a UV dose-dependent decrease in the maximal rate of MT synthesis measured 8.5 hours postirradiation. The UV sensitivity of the MT induction was greater in XP cells than in NF cells. However, considerations of the differential repair capacities of NF and XP cells superimposed upon the kinetics of MT induction were invoked to explain the apparent differential UV sensitivity of MT induction. Liquid holding recovery experiments showed that NF cells possess the capacity to reactivate this inducible gene function rapidly while XP cells arc deficient in the reactivation capacity. These results are discussed in the context of both UV transcriptional mapping of this inducible gene function and development of techniques for measuring repair of transcription-blocking lesions.
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  • 79
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 135-148 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: DNA adduct formation ; benzo(a)pyrene metabolism ; human cells ; mammary fibroblasts ; mammary epithelial cells ; metabolite patterns ; benzo(a)pyrene ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We demonstrate in cell culture that mammary epithelial cells from normal human breast specimens metabolize benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) and form adducts with the bases of their DNA more readily and at lower concentrations of BaP than do fibroblasts from the same specimens. BaP metabolism and adduct formation was determined in the same incubations with epithelial cells grown out in early passage from each of three specimens and with fibroblasts from one of these specimens. The metabolite pattern of the epithelial cells was indicative of preferential formation of 7, 8-dihydrodiol-9, 10-dihydroepoxybenzo(a)pyrene the ultimate carcinogen. In contrast, fibroblasts formed mainly mono- and dihydroxide derivatives of BaP. The metabolite pattern from epithelial cells was compatible with the ease in which adducts between DNA and the diolepoxide of benzo(a)pyrene were formed. These results provide evidence that chemical carcinogens should be considered as possible factors in the induction of breast cancer in women.
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  • 80
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 99-119 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: carcinogenesis ; DNA alkylation ; DNA repair ; O6-methylguanine ; nitrosamines ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Skin tumors can be effectively induced in mice by the repetitive application of a carcinogen. The relative order of sensitivity to complete carcinogenesis is Sencar 〉 CD-1 〉 C57BL/6 ≥ BALB/c ≥ ICR/Ha Swiss 〉 C3H. Skin tumors in mice can also be induced by the sequential application of a sub-threshold dose of a carcinogen (initiation phase) followed by repetitive treatment with a weak or noncarcinogenic tumor promoter (promotion phase). The relative order of sensitivity to initiation-promotion is Sencar 〉 〉 CD-1 〉 ICR/Ha Swiss ≥ Balb/c 〉 C57BL/6 ≥ C3H ≥ DBA/2. The initiation phase requires only a single application of a carcinogen and is essentially an irreversible step, which probably involves a somatic cell mutation as is evidenced by a good correlation between the carcinogenicity of many chemical carcinogens and their mutagenic activities; the promotion stage, however, is initially reversible, later becoming irreversible. For strains and stocks of mice which respond to initiation-promotion, there is a good correlation between the tumor-initiating activities of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and their abilities to bind covalently to DNA. Potent inhibitors and stimulators of PAH tumor initiation appear to effect the level of the PAH diol epoxide bound to specific DNA adducts. However, when the binding of a given PAH to DNA is compared in various stocks and strains of mice, there is no correlation, since in those mice which are able to metabolize PAH, the amounts of carcinogen bound to DNA are similar.The phorbol ester tumor promoters have been shown to have several cellular and biochemical effects on the skin. Of all the observed phorbol ester related effects on the skin, the induction of epidermal cell proliferation, polyamines, prostagladins, and dark basal keratinocytes as well as other embryonic conditions appear to correlate the best with promotion. Mezerein, a weak promoter, was found to induce many cellular and biochemical changes similar to 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13 acetate (TPA), especially epidermal hyperplasia and polyamines; however, it was not a potent inducer of dark cells. We recently found that promotion could be divided into at least two stages. The first stage (I) can be accomplished by limited treatment with TPA or the nonpromoting agents, 4-O-methyl TPA and the calcium ionophore A23187, and the second stage (II) by repetitive applications of mezerein. The dark basal cells appear to be important in the first stage of promotion, since TPA, 4-0-methyl TPA, and A23187 are potent inducers of dark cells. Fluocinolone acetonide (FA) was found to be a potent inhibitor of stage I and II. Retinoic acid (RA) was ineffective in Stage I but was a potent inhibitor of Stage II promotion, whereas tosyl phenylalanine chloromethylketone (TPCK) specifically inhibited Stage I. In addition, FA and TPCK effectively counteracted the appearance of dark basal keratinocytes but had very little effect on polyamines, whereas RA had no effect on dark cells but is a potent inhibitor of TPA-induced ornithine decarboxylase activity and subsequent putrescine formation. These results provide additional evidence for the importance of dark basal keratinocytes (primitive stem cells) in Stage I of promotion and indicate that most of the other cellular and biochemical responses normally associated with promotion (such as polyamines) are actually associated with Stage II of promotion.Although C57BL/6 mice are relatively resistant to initiation-promotion by PAH initiation and phorbol ester promotion, they are fairly sensitive to complete carcinogenesis by PAH. This suggests that the C57BL/6 mice are resistant to phorbol ester tumor promotion. Preliminary experiments suggest that C57BL/6 and Sencar mice respond qualitatively but not quantitatively to a single treatment with TPA.
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  • 81
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 239-244 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: protein phosphorylation ; regulation ; allosteris regulation ; protein effector ; bacterial phosphotransferase system ; sugar transport ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Regulation of lactose uptake by the phosphoenolpyruvate-sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) has been demonstrated in membrane vesicles of Escherichia coli strain ML308-225. Substrates of the phosphotransferase system inhibited D-lactate energized uptake of lactose but did not inhibit uptake of either L-alanine or L-proline. This inhibition was reversed by intravesicular (but not extravesicular) phosphoenolpyruvate. Lactose uptake was also inhibited by enzyme IIIglc preparations that were shocked into the vesicles, and this inhibition was reversed by phosphoenolpyruvate. Intravesicular HPr and enzyme I stimulated methyl α-glucoside uptake but did not inhibit or stimulate lactose accumulation. Vesicles maintained at 0°C for several days partially lost 1) the ability to take up lactose, 2) the ability to accumulate PTS substrates, and 3) PTS-mediated regulation. Phosphoenolpyruvate addition restored all of these activities. These results support a mechanism in which the relative proportions of phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated forms of a phosphotransferase constituent regulate the activity of the lactose permcase.
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  • 82
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 245-260 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: hepatoma cells ; cell surface components ; membrane glycoproteins ; lectin receptor ; sialoglycoproteins ; plasma membrane glycoproteins ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: A major cell surface sialoglycoprotein with Concanavalin A receptor activity has been isolated from rat Zajdela ascites hepatoma cells.The sialic acid residues of the plasma membrane glycoproteins were specifically labeled by oxidation with NaIO4 followed by reduction with NaB3H4. Surface-labeled glycoproteins were released by short incubations with TPCK-trypsin at 37°C and then separated by gel filtration on Sepharose 6B column. The predominantly labeled fraction, GP II2, was then purified by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose equilibrated with 0.05 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.5, and eluted with increasing molarities of NaCl. It was shown to be homogeneous by protein and carbohydrate staining on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, isoelectric focusing, rechromatography on DEAE-cellulose and immunoelectrophoresis. It has an apparent molecular weight of 110,000 daltons.The location of GP II2on the cell surface was confirmed by the fact that it could be labeled metabolically with, D-(3H) glucosamine and externally through the nonpenetrating periodate-NaB3H4 system.GP II2could not be removed from the cell surface by high salt concentrations, chelator, or chaotropic agents but was released from the membrane by detergents. This suggests that GP II2could be an integral protein.Analysis of the carbohydrate composition of GP II2 revealed galactose, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylgalactosamine, and sialic acid as major constituents and mannose as a minor one. This suggests that it contains carbohydrate chains both O- and N-linked to the polypeptide chain, most of them being O-linked.Finally, GP II2has a potent Concanavalin A receptor activity. It inhibits the interaction between Concanavalin A and hepatoma cells and suppresses its effects on hepatoma cell proliferation.
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  • 83
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 261-270 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: TPA-resistant variants ; promotion of anchorage independence ; gangliosides ; growth factor receptors ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The JB6 mouse epidermal cell model system is being used to study the mechanism of promotion of transformation. Promotion of anchorage independence in JB6 cells occurs in response to second-stage but not first-stage promoters, and is inhibited by inhibitors of second-stage not first-stage promotion. A number of variants that are resistant to the phorbol diester TPA have been derived. Some are resistant to plateau density mitogenic stimulation by TPA; others are resistant to promotion of anchorage independence by TPA. Some of the mitogen-resistant variants were promotable by TPA, thus ruling out a requirement for TPA mitogenesis in promotion of transformation in JB6 cells. TPA promotable clones were also sensitive to mezerein and EGF while the TPA nonpromotable variants were also resistant to mezerein and EGF, suggesting that sensitivity to promoters in these JB6 cells is determined at a level distal to receptor binding. Promotion sensitivity did not require available EGF receptors since two TPA promotable variants were EGF receptorless. The mitogenic response of JB6 cells to TPA may however be mediated by EGF since four of four mitogen-resistant variants showed low to zero levels of EGF binding. Tumor promoting phorbol esters produce specific changes in cellular gangliosides. Certain of these changes occur in promotable but not nonpromotable variants of JB6 cells, suggesting that ganglioside changes may be involved in the process of promotion of transformation.
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  • 84
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 285-294 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: carcinogenesis ; DNA adducts ; bronchus ; esophagus ; colon ; pancreas ; aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase ; N-nitrosamines ; polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons ; aflatoxin ; pharmacogenetics ; epoxide hydrolase ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The metabolism of chemical carcinogens has been studied in cultured human bronchus, colon, duodenum, pancreatic duct, and esophagus. Metabolite patterns and carcinogen-DNA adducts are generally qualitatively similar among animal species, individuals within a species, and tissues within an individual. However, wide quantitative differences are observed between individuals in out-bred animal species, including humans. These interindividual differences in amounts of carcinogen-DNA adducts and in activities of enzymes that are important in the metabolism of chemical carcinogens are similar in magnitude (10-to 150-fold) to those observed in pharmacogenetic studies of drug metabolism. The role of these differences as risk factors in human cancer is being investigated.
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  • 85
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: membrane association ; actin binding sites ; calcium-sensitive gelation ; F-actin crosslinking ; falling ball viscometer ; membrane cytoskeleton ; exocytosis ; chromanffin granule ; secretion ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Chromaffin granules are the secretory vesicles directly involved in exocytosis of catecholamines, enkephalins, and other components from adrenal medullary cells. The granules occupy a large portion of the cytoplasmic volume and thus may interact extensively with cytoskeletal elements such as actin. Indeed, using both sedimentation techniques and falling ball viscometry [Fowler et al: J Cell Biol 88:388, 1981] to measure actin binding by membranes, we were able to show that chromaffin granules bind F-actin via a protein site on the membrane, and that these interactions are reversibly inhibited by raising the free calcium ion concentration to micromolar levels ([Ca++]free for half-maximal inhibition approximately 2.6 × 10-7M)[Fowler and Pollard: Nature 295:336, 1982]. Here, we show that F-actin-chromaffin granule interactions are unaffected by changes in pH between about pH 6.4 and 7.4 but are about 50% inhibited by raising the pH from 7.5 to 8.0. They are also 50% inhibited by increasing the KCl concentration to about 200 mM but are not significantly affected by increasing concentrations of K-glutamate up to 500 mM or by varying the MgCl2 concentration between 0 and 6 mM. The interactions between chromaffin granule membranes and F-actin are also reduced in the presence of AIP, AMP-PNP, or free pyrophosphate; cAMP and AMP are without effect.The ability of chromaffin granule membranes to interact with F-actin under conditions that may approximate the resting intracellular environment (neutral pH, low KCl, 1-2 mM MgCl2, 1 mM ATP, [Ca++]free 〈 10-7M, 30°C) suggests that these interactions may partially reconstitute naturally occurring associations between chromaffin granules and the cytoskeleton. Further, regulation of chromaffin granule membrane-actin interactions by ionic factors (pH, calcium, chloride ions, nucleotides) that could vary intracellularly leads us to propose that associations between actin and the chromaffin granule membrane could influence the location and dislocation of these organelles in the cytoplasm.
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  • 86
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 271-283 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: E coli ; DNA damage ; excision repair ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Bacteria and eukaryotic cells employ a variety of enzymatic pathways to remove damage from DNA or to lessen its impact upon cellular functions. Most of these processes were discovered in Escherichia coli and have been most extensively analyzed in this organism because suitable mutants have been isolated and characterized. Analogous pathways have been inferred to exist in mammalian cells from the presence of enzyme activities similar to those known to be involved in repair in bacteria, from the analysis of events in cells treated with DNA damaging agents, and from the analysis of the few naturally occurring mutant cell types.Excision repair of pyrimidine dimers produced by UV in E coli is initiated by an incision event catalyzed by a complex composed of uvrA, uvrB, and uvrC gene products. Multiple exonuclease and polymerase activities are available for the subsequent excision and resynthesis steps. In addition to the constitutive pathway, which produces short patches of 20-30 nucleotides, an inducible excision repair process exists that produces much longer patches. This long patch pathway is controlled by the recA-lexA regulatory circuit and also requires the recF gene. It is apparently not responsible for UV-induced mutagenesis. However, the ability to perform inducible long patch repair correlates with enhanced bacterial survival and with a major component of the Weigle reactivation of bacteriophage with double-strand DNA genomes.Mammalian cells possess an excision repair pathway similar to the constitutive pathway in E coli. Although not as well understood, the incision event is at least as complex, and repair resynthesis produces patches of about the same size as the constitutive short patches. In mammalian cells, no patches comparable in size to those produced by the inducible pathway of E coli are observed.Repair in mammalian cells may be more complicated than in bacteria because of the structure of chromatin, which can affect both the distribution of DNA damage and its accessibility to repair enzymes. A coordinated alteration and reassembly of chromatin at sites of repair may be required. We have observed that the sensitivity of digestion by staphylococcal nuclease (SN) of newly synthesized repair patches resulting from excision of furocoumarin adducts changes with time in the same way as that of patches resulting from excision of pyrimidine dimers. Since furocoumarin adducts are formed only in the SN-sensitive linker DNA between nucleosome cores, this suggests that after repair resynthesis is completed, the nucleosome cores in the region of the repair event do not return exactly to their original positions.We have also studied excision repair of UV and chemical damage in the highly repeated 172 base pair α DNA sequence in African green monkey cells. In UV irradiated cells, the rate and extent of repair resynthesis in this sequence is similar to that in bulk DNA. However, in cells containing furocoumarin adducts, repair resynthesis in α DNA is only about 30% of that in bulk DNA. Since the frequency of adducts does not seem to be reduced in α DNA, it appears that certain adducts in this unique DNA may be less accessible to repair.Endonuclease V of bacteriophage T4 incises DNA at pyrimidine dimers by cleaving first the glycosylic bond between deoxyribose and the 5′ pyrimidine of the dimer and then the phosphodiester bond between the two pyrimidines. We have cloned the gene (denV) that codes for this enzyme and have demonstrated its expression in uvrA recA and uvrB recA cells of E coli. Because T4 endonuclease V can alleviate the excision repair deficiency of xeroderma pigmentosum when added to permeabilized cells or to isolated nuclei after UV irradiation, the cloned denV gene may ultimately be of value for analyzing DNA repair pathways in cultured human cells.
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  • 87
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 351-362 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: monoclonal antibodies ; erythroid differentiation ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Chicken erythroblasts can be transformed by the avian retrovirus, avian erythroblastosis virus (AEV). Earlier studies have shown that the mechanism of transformation appears to involve a “block” in differentiation, in that when erythroblasts are transformed by a temperature-sensitive mutant of ts34 AEV and incubated at the nonpermissive temperature, the cells start to differentiate and produce hemoglobin. We have decided to use this system to isolate pure populations of chicken erythroblasts and raise monoclonal antibodies against their cell surface proteins. Three monoclonal antibodies were isolated and tested for their ability to bind to various hematopoietic cell types; two were shown to be erythroid-specific, whereas the other antibody bound to proliferating cells but not to erythrocytes or granulocytes. Of the erythroid-specific antibodies, one precipitated a 94,000 molecular weight protein, whereas the other precipitated a 11,000 molecular weight protein that was tentatively identified as hemoglobin. The use of this system and approach to identify and evaluate changes that occur during the differentiation is discussed.
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  • 88
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 363-375 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: T4 bacteriophage ; short-tail fibers ; fiber formation ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The characteristics of pure preparations of short-tail fibers of bacteriophage T4 have been studied in the optical and electron microscope. Three main structures were observed: 1) spheres of 8.1 nm diameter; 2) fibers 43 nm long and 3.8 nm thick; and 3) fibers 54 nm long and 3.2 nm thick. Both types of fibers exhibited a regular beaded appearance. The 43-nm fibers were the most abundant structure. During the process of purification of the short-tail fibers, the formation of aggregates was observed each time the material containing the short-tail fibers was dialyzed against saline solutions. These aggregates became increasingly fibrous (as observed in the optical microscope) as the material used was increasingly enriched in short-tail fibers. Finally, most of the aggregates were of the fibrous type when they were formed from a purified preparation of short-tail fibers. In the electron microscope, it was found that the filamentous aggregates were organized in well-defined bundles. The amino acid composition of the highly purified short-tail fibers was also determined. Among the known fibrous proteins, the ones that most resemble the amino acid composition of the short-tail fibers are actin and fibrinogen. These observations are discussed in relation to the T4 short-tail fiber structure and their localization on the hexagonal baseplate of the T4 tail structure.
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  • 89
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 18 (1982), S. 395-405 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: polyclonal B cell activation ; suppression ; T cells ; regulation ; lipopolysaccharide ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Resident T lymphocytes have been found to exert helper and suppressor regulatory influences with regard to polyclonal activation of murine splenic B lymphocytes elicited by lipopolysaccharide. In the normal adult spleen, only T cell helper influences are exercised over polyclonal B cell activation. This activity is a property of Lyt 1+2- T cells and does not appear to be subject to MHC restriction. Suppressive influence evidently is either latent or it exists at such a low level that its effects are difficult to detect. No regulatory activity can be recovered from the supernatants of T cells, cultured either with or without LPS. However, suppressor T cell function may be evoked by activating splenic T cells with Concanavalin A or by sonicating unstimulated splenic T cells in order to liberate a suppressive potential which is not expressed by these unstimulated cells when intact. The soluble fraction of resident splenic T cell sonicates exerts both helper and suppressor regulatory influences. The soluble helper activity is derived from Lyt 1+2- T cells, whereas suppressor activity is generated from Lyt 1-2+ T cells. The suppressive activity of T cell sonicates is not restricted by the MHC gene complex. Helper and suppressor activities contained in splenic T cell sonicates were separated by gel chromatography; the suppressive activity was found to elute with a molecular weight between 68,000 and 84,000 daltons, and the helper activity eluted with a molecular weight between 15,000 and 23,000 daltons. The data indicate that helper and suppressor activities are distinct molecular entities derived from distinct splenic T lymphocyte subpopulations. The possibility that these molecules are precursors to or components of antigen-specific or nonspecific helper and suppressor factors described in the literature is discussed.
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  • 90
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 105-118 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 91
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 19 (1982), S. 119-125 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: SV40 ; polyoma ; tumor antigens ; cellular proteins ; immunoprecipitation ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Antiserum against the synthetic peptide Lys-Arg-Ser-Arg-His-Phe, corresponding to the carboxy terminus of polyoma virus medium tumor antigen (medium T antigen), immunoprecipitates a protein of 36,000 daltons from polyoma virus-infected and uninfected cell extracts treated with the sulfhydryl group reagent N-ethyl-maleimide. This protein appears to share an antigenic determinant with medium T antigen that is normally buried inside the protein or covered up by another protein or cellular structure. The two-dimensional tryptic fingerprints of the 36K protein and of medium T antigen are apparently unrelated to each other. Antiserum against the octapeptide Ac-Met-Asp-Lys-Val-Leu-Asn-Arg-Tyr, including the amino-terminal heptapeptide sequence of the simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor (T) and small T antigens, cross-reacts with polyoma virus large T antigen, which has an identical amino-terminal heptapeptide sequence except that Lys is replaced by Arg and Asn by Ser. The problem of cross-reactivities of antipeptide sera is discussed.
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  • 92
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 63-69 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: localization ; purification of transforming proteins ; avian viral oncogenes ; nuclear antigen ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The biological and biochemical properties of the transformation-specific proteins of three avian oncornaviruses with different oncogenic potentials were compared, namely the gag-myc protein of the avian myelocytomatosis virus MC29, the gag-erb A protein of the avian erythroblastosis virus AEV, and the gag-fps protein of Fujinami sarcoma virus FSV. These oncogenes were analyzed in transformed fibroblasts that expressed only the transforming proteins but showed no virus replication. Monoclonal antibodies against the viral structural protein p19, which is the N-terminus of the proteins, were used for indirect immunofluorescence, for immunoprecipitation of the proteins from subcellular fractions, and for immunoaffinity column chromatography. With this last method a 3000-fold purification of the proteins was obtained. By indirect immunofluorescence it was shown that the gag-myc protein was located in the nucleus, and bound to DNA after purification. The gag-erb A protein was not nuclear but probably located in the cytoplasm and did not bind to DNA after purification. Neither of the two proteins exhibited protein kinase activity. In contrast, the gag-fps protein did not bind to DNA but showed protein kinase activity after purification. It was not located in the nucleus either.
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  • 93
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 105-112 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 94
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 81-93 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: 3T3 cells ; 3T3 surface membranes ; growth inhibition ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: We have quantitated by autoradiography the binding of [125I]labeled 3T3 plasma membrane fragments to 3T3 cells growing on the surface of plastic dishes; ie, the same conditions in which these membranes specifically arrest the growth of 3T3 cells early in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. We have been able to demonstrate that binding of membranes to cells is coincidental with the expression of the growth inhibitory activity of protein(s) present in the membrane fragments. Treatments that reduce binding (heat denaturation of the membranes or culture in the presence of high scrum) also reduce growth inhibitory activity. [125I]labeled membranes bound to cells are located primarily on the cell surface (as determined by electron microscope autoradiography) and are exchangeable with unlabeled membranes. We conclude that binding of membranes to cells is necessary but may not be sufficient for the expression of the growth inhibitory activity of these membranes. This approach provides information not only on the average level of binding of membranes to cells, but also provides a quantitative assessment of the variation of the level of membrane to cell binding between different cells in the population.
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  • 95
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: N-formyl-chemotactic peptide ; granulocytes ; subcellular fractionation ; peptide receptors ; endocytosis ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Experiments were performed to examine how human granulocytes, stimulated by N-formyl-chemotactic peptides, process the N-formyl peptide receptor. One percent of the surface N-formyl-chemotactic peptide receptors of purified human granulocytes were covalently, specifically, and radioactively labeled at 4°C using the photochemically reactive N-formyl-chemotactic hexapeptide CHO-Nle-Leu-Phe-Nle-[l25I] Tyr-N°(6-(4′-azido-2′-nitrophenyl-amino)hexanoyl)-Lys. After incubation in the presence of 500 nM of N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe at 37°C, the cells were lysed and fractionated by isopycnic surcrose density gradient sedimentation. Receptor-associated radioactivity cosedimented with plasma membrane in fractions from cells kept at 4°C or incubated at 37°C for 2 min or less. Fractionation of cells incubated at 37°C for longer times revealed that the radioactivity sedi-mented to lower densities coincident with Golgi markers and the site of noncovalently bound and internalized formyl-chemotactic peptide. To follow the redistribution of unoccupied receptors, human granulocytes were stimulated with 500 nM N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe at 37°C for 5 min, washed, lysed by N2 cavitation, and fractionated by rate zonal sucrose density gradient sedimentation. Compared to unstimulated controls the specific binding of N-formyl-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe decreased 76% ± 9% in plasma membrane fractions. N-formyl-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe-binding activity associated with an intracellular pool cosedimenting with specific granules remained unchanged. Approximately 20% of the activity lost in the plasma membrane could be accounted for by a redistribution of specific N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe binding to fractions enriched in azurophil granules. We conclude that the receptor is the carrier in the internalization of the N-formyl-chemotactic peptides to a Golgi-enriched fraction and hypothesize that after a short residency in this fraction, the receptor may dissociate from the ligand and pass onto a fraction consedimenting with dense granules.
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  • 96
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    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982) 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
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  • 97
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 237-245 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: chrondocytes ; chromatin ; human cartilage ; extracellular matrix ; growth factors ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Growth factor activity has been identified in the chondrocytes and extracellular matrix (ECM) fractions of human costal cartilage. There was about five times more growth factor activity in the ECM than was found to be associated with the chondrocytes. The growth factor activity in chondrocytes was found to be associated with chromatin. Both the chromatin-associated growth factor (CAGF) activity and extracellular matrix growth factor (EMGF) activity were characterized for molecular weight, charge, and the effect of reduction by sulfhydryl reducing reagents. Biorex cation exchange chromatography showed that both CAGF and EMGF were cationic. CAGF and EMGF have molecular weights between 15,000 and 18,000 as determined by size exclusion chromatography on HPLC TSK 3000 columns equilibrated with guanidine-HCl and dithiothreitol.
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  • 98
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 247-258 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: thrombin ; receptor-mediated endocytosis ; coated pits ; immunocytochemistry ; growth factors ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The localization of thrombin receptors on mouse embryo (ME) cells was examined using electron microscope (EM) immunocytological techniques. ME cells were fixed with formaldehyde, prior to thrombin binding, and thrombin visualized on cell surfaces using affinity-purified antithrombin rabbit antibody and colloidal gold labeled anti-rabbit IgG. Colloidal gold particles were found in clusters on the surface of cells incubated with thrombin. There were approximately seven particles per cluster observed in thin sections with cluster diameters ranging from 70 to 200 nm. These clusters were not observed on cells incubated without thrombin. The total number of particles present on cells incubated with and without thrombin indicate that the colloidal gold labeling is approximately 98% specific for thrombin. Only four colloidal gold particles out of approximately 1,200 were associated with coated pits. Thus the thrombin receptor clusters do not appear to associate with coated membrane regions. To determine whether receptor-bound thrombin was internalized by receptor-mediated endocytosis, ME cells were incubated with 125I-thrombin and examined using EM autoradiography and the trypsin sensitivity of 125I-thrombin which was associated with the cells. In two types of experiments, where thrombin was incubated with cells at 4°C and the temperature increased to 37°C and where initial incubation was at 37°C, the receptor-directed specific internalization proceeded at approximately the same rate as nonspecific internalization. These studies indicate that thrombin that binds to its receptors on ME cells is not rapidly internalized by receptor-mediated endocytosis.
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  • 99
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 277-282 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: Drosophila embryos ; imaginal discs ; ecdysteroid receptor ; 20-hydroxyecdysone ; ponasterone A ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Ecdysteroid binding proteins have been found in nuclei of Drosophila melanogaster embryos. Comparison of results derived from Scatchard analysis, analogue binding competition, and sucrose gradient centrifugation has revealed no significant differences between the properties of the putative embryonic receptor and those of the receptor found in imaginal disks or Kc cells.
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  • 100
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    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 20 (1982), S. 259-276 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: epidermal growth factor ; intracellular processing ; endocytosis ; lysosomes ; degradation ; internalization ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: The intracellular fate of endocytosed 125I-epidermal growth factor was examined in Rat-1 fibroblasts. Cells were pulse-labeled for 5 min in 125I-EGF and chased for 3 hr with an excess of unlabeled EGF. At various times after application of the cold chase, cells were harvested and processed for isopycnic gradient centrifugation on Percoll gradients. Within the period of the 125I-EGF pulse, about 50% of the 125I activity appeared in an organelle containing peak in the gradients. By 20 min after application of the cold chase, 125I activity in the organelle peak began to decrease, and the decrease continued over the next few hours. The 125I activity which exited from its organelle-associated location appeared to be present in the cytosol and was apparently not confined within organelles. Lysosomotropic amines inhibited the egress of 125I activity from the organelle compartment. The 125I activity from both organelle and nonorganelle compartments reacted as completely as authentic 125I-EGF with anti-EGF antibodies and was similar in size to authentic 125I-EGF. Little or no intracellular low molecular weight 125I-containing compounds were detected, although they accumulated in the culture medium. Analytical isoelectric focusing revealed that the organelle-bound form of endocytosed 125I-EGF was more acidic than authentic 125I-EGF and, upon exiting from the organelle compartment, was processed to an even more acidic form. It was the second macromolecular form of processed 125I-EGF that was ultimately degraded to low molecular weight compounds which were then externalized from the cells.
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