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Binding of I-Concanavalin a and agglutination of embryonic neural retina cells : Age-dependent and experimental changes
Authors:M. Martinozzi  A. A. Moscona
Abstract:Embryonic chick neural retina cells dissociated from retina tissue by treatment with EGTA (a calcium chelator) show an age-dependent decline in ability to agglutinate with concanavalin A (ConA). This developmental change in cell surface properties is not due to loss of ConA-binding sites, since mature retina cells can be rendered agglutinable by mild trypsinization. It is also not due to masking of ConA receptors, or to a decrease in their amount, since retina cells from late embryos (19 days) bind four times as much 125I-ConA as cells from early embryos (8 days). Our findings lead us to suggest that, as the retina differentiates the lateral mobility of ConA receptors in the cell membrane decreases resulting in a reduction of cell agglutinability; trypsinization of late embryo retina cells increases the mobility of the receptors and thereby facilitates their clustering by the lectin into a configuration conducive to cell agglutination.The ability of late embryo (19 day) retina cells dispersed with EGTA to agglutinate with ConA could be increased by still other treatments: by pre-incubation of the cell suspension in Tyrode's balanced salt solution (1 h, 37 °C); and by brief pre-exposure to glutaraldehyde. These two treatments did not enhance cell agglutination with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). Glutaraldehyde treatment of trypsinized cells made them agglutinable with ConA also at 4 °C; cells treated otherwise agglutinated only at higher temperature. Surface-saturation of monodispersed retina cells with ConA at 37 °C—but not at 4 °C—prevented their agglutination with this lectin, but not with WGA; this inhibition was reversible by methyl a-D-glucopyranoside (αMG).
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