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1.
Human serum spreading factor (SF) is a cell adhesion and spreading-promoting glycoprotein purified from serum or plasma that mediates effects in a wide variety of animal cell culture systems. HepG2 human hepatoma cells were found to synthesize and secrete SF into culture medium. Quantitative immunoassay of the protein indicated a concentration of about 1 microgram/ml in 48 hr-conditioned medium from confluent cultures. Although fibronectin also was synthesized and secreted into the culture medium, HepG2 cell spreading was observed in response to human serum SF, but not in response to human plasma fibronectin. Immunoprecipitation of SF from culture medium of cells metabolically-labeled with leucine, fucose or glucosamine identified a single form of the molecule of approximately 70,000 daltons. Treatment of cultures with tunicamycin inhibited incorporation of fucose and glucosamine into immunoprecipitated SF, but did not prevent synthesis and secretion of the protein. Electrophoretic analysis and cell spreading assays showed that SF secreted by tunicamycin-treated HepG2 cells was of molecular weight (mw) approximately 60,000, and was biologically active.  相似文献   

2.
A protein with potent cell-attachment and spreading-promoting activity was isolated from fibronectin-free human serum. The purification steps included affinity chromatography on heparin-agarose and preparative isoelectric focusing. The purified protein was homogeneous as judged from dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. It had an isoelectric point of 5.0 and an Mr of 52 000. The protein promoted the spreading of Chinese-hamster ovary cells to plastic in a manner similar to that observed with fibronectin.  相似文献   

3.
Heparin-binding properties of human serum spreading factor   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Human serum spreading factor (SF) is a blood glycoprotein that promotes attachment and spreading and influences growth, migration, and differentiation of a variety of animal cells in culture. SF purified from human plasma or serum by chromatographic methods reported previously (Barnes, D. W., and Silnutzer, J. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 12548-12552) does not bind to heparin-Sepharose under conditions of physiological ionic strength and pH. In a further examination of the heparin-binding properties of human serum SF, we found that exposure of purified SF to 8 M urea altered several properties of the protein, including heparin affinity, and these alterations remained after removal of the urea from SF solutions. Urea-treated SF bound to heparin under physiological conditions, and salt concentrations of 0.4 M or higher were required for elution of urea-treated SF from heparin-Sepharose at pH 7.0. The alteration of heparin-binding properties of SF also was observed upon exposure of the protein to heat or acid. Treatment of SF with urea, heat, or acid resulted additionally in greatly decreased cell spreading-promoting activity of the molecule. The decreased biological activity was associated with a reduced ability of the treated SF to bind to the cell culture substratum, a prerequisite for the attachment-promoting activity of the molecule. Experiments examining the heparin-binding properties of native SF in unfractionated human plasma indicated that the major portion of SF in blood did not bind to heparin under conditions of physiological ionic strength and pH.  相似文献   

4.
The detergent-insoluble matrix of cultured human fibroblasts contains cytoskeletal and nuclear components, as well as two major, noncollagenous glycoproteins, fibronectin and GP140. These glycoproteins are stabilized by extensive intermolecular disulfide bonding. GP140, in contrast to fibronectin, is resistant to digestion with trypsin and is not cross-reactive with antisera prepared against fibronectin (Carter, W. G., and Hakomori, S. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 6953-6960). GP140 was partially purified, under nonreducing conditions, by differential extraction of trypsinized cells with sodium trichloroacetate. Alternatively, a higher yield of GP140 could be obtained under reducing conditions by extraction with urea-dithiothreitol followed by molecular sieve chromatography in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and dithiothreitol. The purified GP140 contained mannose, galactose, and N-acetylglucosamine residues, totaling 2.7% of the molecule. In addition, mild periodate oxidation of GP140 followed by reduction with NaB3H4 under conditions designed to label sialic acid also labeled the peptide portion of the molecule. Amino acid analysis of GP140 detected periodate-sensitive hydroxylysine residues, as well as hydroxylproline, accounting for the periodate/NaB3H4-induced label in the peptide. These hydroxylated amino acids are major components of collagens and collagen-like proteins. The GP140 isolated under nonreducing conditions was found to induce stable cell attachment and cell spreading when coated on plastic surfaces. The cell attachment could not be inhibited with affinity purified anti-fibronectin antibodies. However, trypsinization of cells under conditions that removed surface fibronectin reduced the ability of the cells to bind to the GP140-coated surface. Metabolic labeling of cells with radioactive glucosamine during 1-h cell attachment experiments incorporated label into both fibronectin and GP140, as well as four other carbohydrate-containing components as part of a stable detergent-insoluble matrix, indicating that the cells rapidly glycosylate both fibronectin and GP140 and incorporate them into the matrix. Long term labeling and chase experiments indicated that fibronectin and GP140 in the matrix are subject to very slow turnover. Neither fibronectin nor GP140 were detectable in the detergent-insoluble matrix of SV40-transformed human fibroblasts by either metabolic or cell surface labeling. These results are consistent with the conclusion that fibronectin and GP140 may function in a cooperative manner in cell adhesion and spreading.  相似文献   

5.
HeLa-S3 cells were analyzed for their ability to attach and spread on cell culture microcarriers that were made either positively or negatively charged with polymeric plastics or were coated with BSA, gelatin, fibronectin or laminin. The cells stuck to all microcarriers under low shear, i.e. low stirring conditions with similar rates of attachment. Except in the case of gelatin microcarriers where cells fully spread, cells did not or only partially spread on the others. Under high shear, cells attached with the following rates: positive = negative = gelatin = BSA greater than laminin greater than fibronectin. Cells detached from all but the gelatin and BSA coated beads. However, the cells did not fully spread on BSA beads. The observation that cells not only attached but also spread on gelatin beads indicated that gelatin could be a specific substratum adhesion protein while the other surfaces were 'non-specific'. It should be noted that neither antibodies to laminin nor fibronectin interfered with attachment to gelatin. Protein synthesis inhibitors reduced the attachment and spreading on gelatin beads under high but not low shear conditions. With low shear, attachment and spreading appeared normal. We concluded that the density of the cell surface attachment proteins was reduced by the protein synthesis inhibitors and there were not enough present to facilitate attachment under high shear. The results also indicated that protein synthesis was not essential for cell spreading. Proteolysis of the cell surface with low concentrations of trypsin abolished the attachment of cells to gelatin-coated beads. The reappearance of attachment ability took several hours and was inhibited by actinomycin-D.  相似文献   

6.
Vitronectin—A major cell attachment-promoting protein in fetal bovine serum   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Bovine serum is a constituent of most media used for the culture of animal cells. The adhesion-promoting properties of serum are generally attributed to fibronectin, yet there have been frequent reports of other adhesion-promoting molecules in bovine serum. Using a technique in which adhesive proteins are visualized after separation by SDS-PAGE, we graphically confirm the presence of a second cell attachment protein in bovine serum and present the evidence that this molecule is the bovine equivalent of vitronectin. The molecular size of this protein is in the same range as the size of the adhesive human plasma protein, vitronectin. The bovine protein also shared with human vitronectin an affinity for glass, and it could be purified by a combination of glass bead and ion exchange chromatography. The isolated bovine protein had varying proportions of an 80 and a 65 kD polypeptide. It showed immunological cross-reactivity with anti-human vitronectin and with anti-human somatomedin B. Somatomedin B is a serum peptide which has a NH2-terminal sequence identical to that of human vitronectin. The identity of the bovine protein as vitronectin was established by showing that its NH2-terminal amino acid sequence is strongly homologous with those of human vitronectin and somatomedin B. Quantitation of the adhesive activities of fibronectin and vitronectin in bovine plasma and fresh serum showed that more activity is associated with vitronectin than with fibronectin. The preponderance of vitronectin was particularly clear in fetal bovine serum intended for cell culture. In various batches, cell attachment activity attributable to vitronectin was 8-16-fold greater than that of fibronectin, making vitronectin the main adhesive protein in routine cell culture media.  相似文献   

7.
The glycoprotein laminin appears to function in the attachment of various epithelial cells to basement membranes. We examined whether its putative cell-adhesive activity could be analyzed in a simple, one-component model system—the agglutination of erythrocytes. Laminin is a potent agglutinin of aldehyde-fixed sheep and human erythrocytes, with half-maximal agglutination of 0.8 μg/ml in a standard hemagglutination assay. Inhibitors of this hemagglutinating activity include gangliosides and certain charged phospholipids. The spectrum of molecules is similar but not identical to inhibitors of the hemagglutinating activity of the adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin. Laminin is much less biologically active in three other assays for fibronectin biological activity involving cell spreading on tissue culture substrates, attachment of fibroblastic cells to type I collagen, and restoration of normal morphology to transformed fibroblasts. The adhesive glycoproteins laminin and fibronectin therefore differ markedly in biological activities in several specific adhesion assays; however, they resemble one another in binding to heparin, collagen, and cell surfaces and in their agglutinin activity.  相似文献   

8.
F Grinnell  M K Feld 《Cell》1979,17(1):117-129
Experiments were carried out to test the hypothesis that the initial attachment and spreading of human fibroblasts in serum-free medium occurs to cell fibronectin which has been secretd spread on tissue culture substrata in serum-free medium in 60 min. When potential protein adsorption sites on the substratum were covered with bovine serum albumin before initial human fibroblasts attachment, their subsequent attachment to the substratum was prevented. When substratum adsorption sites were covered immediately after initial attachment, subsequent cell spreading was prevented. The distribution of fibronectin on human fibroblast surfaces during initial attachment and spreading was studied by indirect immunofluorescence analysis using a monospecific anti-cold-insoluble globulin antiserum. The initial appearance (10 min) of fibronectin was in spots over the entire cell surface. Concomitant with human fibroblast spreading, the random distribution of sites disappeared, and most fibronectin was subsequently observed in spots at the cell substratum interface (60 min). A fibrillar pattern of fibronectin appeared later (2-8 hr). The sites beneath the cells could be visualized as footprints on the substratum following treatment of the attached human fibroblasts with 0.1 M NaOH. A second fluorescence pattern of fibronectin secreted on the substratum was characterized by a diffuse halo around the cells and a very faint, diffuse staining elsewhere on the substratum. Another cell type (baby hamster kideny cells) was used to assay biologically for the presence or absence of the factor secreted by human fibroblasts on the substratum. Human fibroblasts were found to secrete an adhesion factor for baby hamster kidney cells into the substratum in a time- and temperature-dependent fashion, and immunological studies indicated that the factor secreted by human fibroblasts was cross-reactive with cold-in-soluble globulin, the plasma form of fibronectin. The conditioning factor secreted by the human fibroblasts was also found to be an attachment and spreading factor for human fibroblasts in experiments measuring human fibroblast adhesion to fibronectin footprints of human fibroblasts. Substratum-adsorbed cold-insoluble globulin was also found to be an attachment and spreading factor for human fibroblasts. Based upon the timing of appearance of conditioning factors on the substratum and the immunofluorescence patterns, it seems that the diffusely organized fibronectin on the substratum constitutes the sites to which cell attachment occurs. The bright spots of fibronectin that appear beneath the cells may represent fibronectin reorganization during cell spreading.  相似文献   

9.
The platelet fibrinogen receptor, glycoprotein complex IIb-IIIa, was isolated from human platelets by lectin and monoclonal antibody affinity chromatography and a polyclonal antiserum (anti-IIb-IIIa) was generated and used to probe for the presence and function of IIb-IIIa-like molecules in two adherent human cell lines. Both C32 melanoma cells and WI38 fibroblasts expressed a IIb-IIIa-like complex on their surface as indicated by immunoprecipitation of detergent extracts of surface radiolabeled cells. When added to cells plated in medium containing 10% serum, the anti-IIb-IIIa antiserum perturbed the adhesion of C32 melanoma cells, but not of WI38 fibroblasts. In a serum-free system, anti-IIb-IIIa antibodies inhibited attachment and spreading of C32 cells to fibrinogen, vitronectin, and fibronectin adsorbed to glass. Anti-IIb-IIIa had no effect on the attachment and spreading of WI38 cells to the extracellular matrix proteins, however. Thus, the IIb-IIIa-like complex appears to play a predominant role in cell-substratum adhesion of C32 cells, but not WI38 cells, and may result from the fact that, on a protein basis, the C32 melanoma cells express approximately 3 times more complex on their surface than do WI38 fibroblasts. The results suggest that the relative abundance of a particular adhesion receptor on the cell surface may govern its importance to cell-substratum adhesion.  相似文献   

10.
Studies on the receptor specificity and dynamics involved in fibroblast phagocytosis of latex beads revealed the following: 1) Ligands other than fibronectin such as concanavalin A (ConA) and serum spreading factor, when coated on latex beads, were found to promote phagocytosis of the beads. This indicates that fibroblast phagocytosis, like spreading, is a ligand-receptor mediated phenomenon not specifically requiring fibronectin (pFN); 2) Anti-pFN antibodies were found to inhibit the ability of cells to ingest pFN-coated beads that previously were bound on the cell surfaces. Consequently, binding of beads to the cell surfaces per se is not a sufficient signal to promote ingestion of the beads; 3) Finally, divalent cations protected receptor function necessary for phagocytosis of pFN-coated beads from proteolysis by trypsin, as previously was found for receptors involved in cell attachment and spreading on pFN-coated culture dishes. Recovery experiments carried out with cells whose surface receptors had been destroyed indicated that there was an internal (or cryptic cell surface) pool of receptors that amounted to at least 50% of the receptors normally found on the cell surface. After complete destruction of the cell surface and cryptic pools of receptors, reappearance of receptors required for bead binding and phagocytosis required several hours and did not occur in the absence of new protein synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
The adherence of human umbilical vein endothelial (HUVE) cells to adhesive matrix proteins was examined to determine if cell attachment and spreading were mediated by the glycoprotein (GP) IIb-IIIa complex on endothelial cells. The HUVE cells adhered well to glass slides that had been coated with fibronectin, vitronectin, fibrinogen, or von Willebrand factor but failed to adhere to albumin-coated or to uncoated slides. The HUVE cell attachment and spreading on vitronectin, fibrinogen, and von Willebrand factor were greatly inhibited by a GP IIb-IIIa monoclonal antibody (7E3). In contrast, HUVE cell attachment to fibronectin was not inhibited by 7E3 but was inhibited by a fibronectin-receptor antibody (alpha GP140), which had no effect on cell attachment to the other adhesive proteins. The 7E3 antibody, but not alpha GP140, disrupted HUVE cell monolayers by detaching cells from their naturally occurring extracellular matrix. These data indicate that platelet GP IIb-IIIa-like proteins mediate the adherence of HUVE cells to specific adhesive proteins and to the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

12.
Affinity chromatography was used to identify a putative cell surface receptor for fibronectin. A large cell-attachment-promoting fibronectin fragment was used as the affinity matrix, and specific elution was effected by using synthetic peptides containing the sequence Arg-Gly-Asp, which is derived from the cell recognition sequence in the fibronectin cell attachment site. A 140 kd protein was bound by the affinity matrix from octylglucoside extracts of MG-63 human osteosarcoma cells and specifically eluted with the synthetic peptide Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-Pro. The 140 kd protein was labeled by cell surface specific radioiodination and became incorporated into liposomes at a high efficiency. Liposomes containing this protein showed specific affinity toward fibronectin-coated surfaces, and this binding could be selectively inhibited by the synthetic cell-attachment peptide but not by inactive peptides. Affinity chromatography on wheat germ agglutinin-Sepharose showed that the 140 kd protein is a glycoprotein and, in combination with the fibronectin fragment chromatography, gave highly enriched preparations of the 140 kd protein. These properties suggest that the 140 kd glycoprotein is a membrane-embedded cell surface protein directly involved in the initial step of cell adhesion to fibronectin substrates.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined the interaction of adult rat hepatocytes in primary culture, to type IV collagen, fibronectin, and laminin, the major basement membrane proteins of normal rat liver. Culture substrata consisted of glass coverslips, which were covalently derivatized with individual purified basement membrane constituents at varying densities of protein. The attachment of freshly prepared hepatocytes was examined after incubation at 37 degrees C for 30 min as a function of the amount of protein on the coverslips. For each of the three types of substratum under study, distinct modes of cell attachment were observed, with the apparent affinity of hepatocytes for type IV collagen being three-fold greater than for fibronectin and ten-fold greater than for laminin. Cell attachment exhibited saturation on all substrata. Hepatocyte spreading was measured by scanning electron microscopy of cells incubated at 37 degrees for 2 h on similarly prepared coverslips. A five-fold greater surface density of type IV collagen was required for maximal spreading compared with attachment. For cells on fibronectin or laminin the maximal cell spreading reached on type IV collagen did not occur even at coverslip protein densities 10 to 20 times those providing for maximal cell attachment. A very similar qualitative pattern of cell proteins was secreted within a few hours of plating on the various substrata and further studies failed to reveal any evidence that attachment and spreading was mediated by endogenously produced matrix molecules.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We have utilized monoclonal antibodies directed against glycoproteins on the surface of proximal tubule epithelial cells (PTEC) to study their interaction with matrix components. PTEC exposed to monoclonal antibodies directed against a 330-kDa cell surface glycoprotein exhibited a significant epitope-specific inhibition of attachment and proliferation on type I collagen-, fibronectin-, laminin-, and gelatin-coated tissue culture surfaces. This effect was not due to antibody toxicity since such cells did not exhibit metabolic dysfunction in suspension cultures and the inhibition could be reversed upon removal of the antibody from the cell surface. Furthermore, detergent-solubilized gp330 demonstrated specific affinity for fibronectin, laminin, and type I collagen which was not inhibited by Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptides. A monoclonal antibody directed against the receptor epitope was capable of promoting PTEC adherence and growth when such an antibody was immobilized on cell culture dishes. Although gp330 acted as a receptor for matrix proteins in primary cultures of freshly isolated PTEC, this effect was not demonstrable in established cultures. These results suggest that freshly isolated PTEC depend on gp330 for their attachment to matrix molecules while in vitro-adapted PTEC rely on other receptors activated by culture conditions. The affinity of gp330 for matrix molecules may be of pathogenic relevance in the persistence of gp330-containing immune complexes formed in the glomerular capillary wall in experimental membranous nephropathy (Heymann nephritis).  相似文献   

15.
The action of two effectors - fibronectin (FN) and retinyl acetate (RA) - on cell attachment and spreading of human synoviocytes was investigated by adding these two drugs to the cell culture medium. No relationship was observed between the level of the effectors (FN = 20-80 micrograms/well, RA = 0.50-2 micrograms/well) and the biological effects studied. For normal human synoviocytes, fibronectin was less effective on the adhesion than fetal calf serum (FCS) present in the control culture medium; retinyl acetate, a drug acting on glycoprotein synthesis, led to similar effects to those observed for FCS-treated cells. In the case of rheumatoid synovial cells, the degree of adhesion was similar for drug- and FCS-treated cultures. Moreover, FN and RA had little effect on the spreading compared to FCS. Given these results, it would appear that synoviocytes differ in their behaviour from usual fibroblastic models.  相似文献   

16.
A rapid particle agglutination assay (PAA) utilizing latex beads coated with connective tissue and serum proteins was evaluated for its ability to identify fibronectin, collagen (types I and IV), fibrinogen, and transferrin cell surface receptors on Vibrio and Aeromonas strains isolated from diseased fish, human infections, and the environment. Similar tests were performed to screen for cell surface lectins. Vibrio as well as Aeromonas strains were found to bind connective tissue proteins (collagen types I, II, and IV and fibronectin), serum proteins (i.e., fibrinogen), and glycoproteins (bovine submaxillary mucin, hog gastric mucin, orosomucoid, and fetuin) immobilized on the latex particles. The specificity of the agglutination reaction was studied by particle agglutination inhibition assays performed by preincubating bacterial suspensions in solutions containing either gelatin (for the various connective tissue protein PAA reagents) or sialic acid-rich glycoproteins (for the various glycoprotein PAA reagents). Expression of cell surface receptors for connective tissue proteins was found to depend on culture methods.  相似文献   

17.
Baby hamster kidney cells, bovine aortal endothelial cells, bovine smooth muscle cells, and chick embryo fibroblasts were all observed to attach and grow on serotonin which had been immobilized by covalent coupling to agarose beads. While growth and morphology of cells on immobilized serotonin appeared normal, a change in cell function may have occurred since the pattern of polypeptides expressed by these cells was different from that of cells grown on two other substrates: immobilized fibronectin and tissue culture plastic. By changing the composition of the fetal calf serum proteins in the growth medium it was shown that cells attach directly to immobilized fibronectin without mediation by medium components. In contrast, cells were found not to attach directly to immobilized serotonin but to attach indirectly via factors absorbed onto immobilized serotonin from fetal calf serum. The major component of this cell attachment activity was shown not to be fibronectin and was identified following separation by SDS-PAGE, electroblotting, and cell binding on nitrocellulose filters. The cell attachment activity compromises a major protein species of Mr 70,000 which is the molecular size of the recently identified serum spreading factor also called vitronectin.  相似文献   

18.
Decellularisation of skeletal muscle provides a system to study the interactions of myoblasts with muscle extracellular matrix (ECM). This study describes the efficient decellularisation of quadriceps muscle with the retention of matrix components and the use of this matrix for myoblast proliferation and differentiation under serum free culture conditions. Three decellularisation approaches were examined; the most effective was phospholipase A2 treatment, which removed cellular material while maximizing the retention of ECM components. Decellularised muscle matrices were then solubilized and used as substrates for C2C12 mouse myoblast serum free cultures. The muscle matrix supported myoblast proliferation and differentiation equally as well as collagen and fibronectin. Immunofluorescence analyses revealed that myoblasts seeded on muscle matrix and fibronectin differentiated to form long, well-aligned myotubes, while myoblasts seeded on collagen were less organized. qPCR analyses showed a time dependent increase in genes involved in skeletal muscle differentiation and suggested that muscle-derived matrix may stimulate an increased rate of differentiation compared to collagen and fibronectin. Decellularized whole muscle three-dimensional scaffolds also supported cell adhesion and spreading, with myoblasts aligning along specific tracts of matrix proteins within the scaffolds. Thus, under serum free conditions, intact acellular muscle matrices provided cues to direct myoblast adhesion and migration. In addition, myoblasts were shown to rapidly secrete and organise their own matrix glycoproteins to create a localized ECM microenvironment. This serum free culture system has revealed that the correct muscle ECM facilitates more rapid cell organisation and differentiation than single matrix glycoprotein substrates.  相似文献   

19.
Human platelet glycoproteins IIb and IIIa form the receptor for fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor and fibronectin. Isolated human glycoproteins IIb-IIIa are phosphorylated by purified pp60c-src protein tyrosine kinase. Analysis of the phosphorylated proteins on SDS-PAGE showed that under reducing conditions both phosphoproteins change their relative molecular masses from 135 to 120 kDa and from 97 to 105 kDa, which are characteristic properties of glycoproteins IIb-IIIa. Phosphorylated proteins could be immunoprecipitated with an antiserum against glycoproteins IIb-IIIa but not by control serum. Some kinetic properties of the glycoprotein phosphorylations are also investigated. How the glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex acquires its receptor activity in stimulated platelets is unknown; however, phosphorylation could be an important mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Hepatocytes adhere well on plastic in the presence of serum or fibronectin and subsequent spreading is not prevented when protein synthesis was blocked by cycloheximide. Protein synthesis-independent spreading was also observed in cultures containing serum depleted of fibronectin by affinity chromatography. This indicates that serum-mediated adhesion is independent of fibronectin and suggests the existence of an adhesion factor other than fibronectin in serum. The involvement of different membrane components for fibronectin- and serum-mediated adhesion was demonstrated by experiments where the different adhesion-inhibiting activities of antisera raised against plasma membranes of rat liver and Morris hepatoma 7777 (Neumeier et al., FEBS lett 168 (1984) 241-244) were used. Whereas anti-liver antibodies inhibited both types of adhesion, anti-hepatoma antibodies were only able to prevent fibronectin-mediated adhesion. This indicates again that two different mechanisms are responsible for fibronectin- and serum-mediated adhesion. Fractionation of fetal calf serum (FCS) by size exclusion HPLC revealed that proteins of molecular weights of 60-80 kD promoted attachment and spreading of hepatocytes. Spreading was not perturbated by anti-hepatoma antibodies, indicating that an adhesion factor of 60-80 kD is responsible for serum-mediated adhesion. 'Serum-spreading factor', also called vitronectin, from human plasma has been described as having a similar molecular weight. The purified factor was found to mediate hepatocyte adhesion which was not inhibited by anti-hepatoma antibodies. This suggests that serum-mediated adhesion depends on an adhesion factor present in FCS, which is similar to or identical with vitronectin.  相似文献   

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