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1.
About 30% of the proteins of adherent cultured chick embryo fibroblasts are not solubilized by the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100 and remain firmly attached to the substratum. The insoluble residue contains a considerable part of the cell's cytoskeleton and its major constituents are large external transformation-sensitive (LETS) protein, the heavy chain of myosin, a 52,000 molecular weight protein and actin. Kinetic studies reveal that cytoskeleton insolubility in Triton is acquired either concurrently with cell adhesion or very closely with it. Neither cell adhesion nor binding of the Triton cytoskeleton to the substratum require de novo synthesis of protein. In the attempt to assess the role of LETS protein in cytoskeleton attachment, we find that trypsin-detached cells rapidly acquire Triton-insoluble cytoskeleton although their LETS protein content is about 15--20% of its level in long-term cultures. Removal of the great majority of LETS molecules of adherent cultures by either urea or trypsin treatment does not affect the relative amount or composition of the anchored cytoskeletal proteins. Also, LETS protein of cultures exposed to cycloheximide for extended periods of time, is reduced to 10% of its maximum amount without much affecting the attachment and composition of the cytoskeleton. It is deduced that the great majority of LETS protein is not required for the attachment of the Triton cytoskeleton to the substratum.  相似文献   

2.
Cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions are important physiological determinants of cell growth, survival and transformation. Cell adhesion to the extra cellular matrix (ECM) via integrins also crucially influences the organization of the cytoskeleton. It triggers a cascade of intracellular biochemical events, which regulate cell viability and growth. We have studied the relationship between cell attachment to the substratum and cytoskeletal organization and cell survival and transformation. Our results demonstrate that in the absence of attachment to the substratum, adhesion-dependent fibroblasts exhibit rapid loss of viability. However, a small percentage of cells survive even after remaining non-adherent for 16h. The adherent and non-adherent cells differ from one another both morphologically and physiologically. The latter show a loss of alpha5beta1 integrin expression on their surface and bind non-specifically to the substratum and ECM, thereby activating certain pathways more efficiently than adherent cells. We have also shown that non-adherent cells grow faster and have worse cytoskeletal organization after attachment to the substratum, and do not form focal adhesions or actin stress fibres. Hence, our data suggests that rat fibroblasts in prolonged suspension exhibit some properties that are comparable to cells undergoing transformation, by adapting integrin-dependent or independent signalling pathways for their survival.  相似文献   

3.
Cultured embryonic heart cells release a powerful inducer of neurite outgrowth into the surrounding medium. The present report demonstrates that these cells also deposit material which induces neurite outgrowth directly onto their culture substratum. Thus, embryonic heart cells condition both the culture medium and the culture substratum with respect to neurite outgrowth. Conditioned substrata were prepared by incubating heart cell monolayers in EDTA until the cells released from the substratum and were discarded. When dissociated neurons from ciliary or sympathetic chain ganglia were plated in fresh medium onto a conditioned substratum, neurite outgrowth was initiated in 80–95% of the neurons within 60 min. The neurite-inducing activity is trypsin sensitive, but is not inactivated by antibodies to the cell attachment protein fibronectin, by the membrane-solubilizing detergent Triton X-100, or by the enzymes collagenase, RNase, or DNase. The factor in conditioned medium which also induces neurite outgrowth depends for its activity on attachment to an artificial polyornithine substratum, under which condition it appears to promote adhesion of neuronal filopodia to the substratum. Thus, neurite outgrowth in these two culture systems occurs only if the substratum is conditioned by the appropriate extracellular materials: conditioned either directly by the deposition of heart cell products or indirectly by the binding of a conditioned medium factor to the polyornithine substratum. These substratum-conditioning factors may be related to those components of the extracellular matrix which support neurite outgrowth in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
A double immunofluorescence staining technique to locate concanavalin A (Con A) surface receptors and cytoplasmic actin in the same cell was applied to monolayer cultures of rat foetal fibroblasts during cell detachment induced by trypsin and during cell attachment to glass substratum. Con A receptors were demonstrated by fluorescein-isothiocyanate-labelled Con A (FITC-Con A) and actin by specific anti-actin antibody (AAA) traced with rhodamine-labelled goat anti-human globulin (R-AHG). Untreated, control cells had an elongated shape, Con A receptors restricted to cell margins and prominent actin filaments. After 2 min treatment with 0.001% trypsin the cells became angular with Con A receptors in clusters and actin in a diffuse or aggreagate staining pattern. Progressive cell rounding followed and this was accompanied by the development of long, thin, arborized cell processes, studded with Con A receptors and containing fine actin filaments. Complete cell rounding preceded cell detachment. The sites of detached cells were marked by fine aggregates containing Con A receptors and actin. In cells attaching to a glass substratum, actin was present in a diffusely stained or aggregate pattern in round cells, in filaments restricted to cell margins in partially spread cells and in numerous filaments in fully spread cells. Con A receptors were present in clusters in round cells, in clusters or caps in partially spread cells and in cell margins in fully spread cells. Binding of FITC-Con A to partially spread cells resulted in dissolution of the few, newly formed, actin filaments. We believe our observations are consistent with the idea that actin filaments, formed during cell attachment, contribute towards the maintenance of cell adhesion by helping in the preservation of cell shape and by anchorage of Con A receptors at points of cell attachment to the substratum.  相似文献   

5.
Investigation of the relative slowness with which trypsin detaches epithelial cells from their adhesions with a substratum suggests that the adherent surface of the cells is normally rather inaccessible to the enzyme. Trypsinisation of cells through a porous filter allowing access of the enzyme to the underside of the cells greatly accelerated detachment: a result consistent with this explanation.  相似文献   

6.
Experiments are described which show that while the presence of calcium in the medium is required for the cells to maintain their adhesion, it is not necessary for the initial attachment of 3T3 cells to solid substrates. Cells are detached by treatment with urea at 4 degrees C suggesting that adhesion may involve hydrogen bonding between the cell surface and the substratum. Although most of the cell-bound calcium is removed by trypsin, the detaching effect of trypsinisation can be inhibited at low temperature suggesting that ionic calcium bridges are probably not directly involved in retaining the cells on the surface. Cells are made totally insensitive to removal by trypsin by prior washing with lanthanum. Our findings suggest that the external role of calcium in cell adhesion is exerted indirectly. We conclude that the cell presents to the exterior at least two physiochemical classes of molecule. One class composed of hydrogen bond-forming adhesive material (possible proteins) and another class of anti-adhesive molecules (possibly glycoproteins). These two components are somehow separated in the formation of adhesive 'plaques' and this process is process is apparently uninfluenced by the calcium concentration in the medium. However, the maintenance of the localised zones of adhesion is aided by factors which prevent their disruption by the intrusion into them of anti-adhesive molecules diffusing from adjacent regions of the cell membrane. These factors include cooling below the transition temperature of the membrane lipids and lateral cross-linking of non-adhesive elements by calcium. By contrast, conditions which reduce the stability of the separation of adhesive and non-adhesive surface components would be expected to diminish the overall adhesiveness of cells to the substratum.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the association of the recently described 140-kDa cell membrane receptor for fibronectin with the cytoskeleton or with substratum-bound fibronectin. Using a monospecific polyclonal antibody to the 140-kDa receptor, we have demonstrated that most of the receptor molecules are soluble in nonionic detergent either in suspension culture CHO cells or in CHO cells attached to and spread on a fibronectin-coated substratum. This may suggest that putative linkages of the receptor either to fibronectin or to detergent-insoluble cytoskeletal components are labile to nonionic detergent and thus are rather weak. Alternatively, it may mean that only a small fraction of the cell's receptors are needed to mediate adhesion. In order to explore this latter concept, we have coated substrata with various concentrations of PB1, a monoclonal antibody with a high affinity for fibronectin receptor. We demonstrate that coating the substratum with increasing concentrations of PB1 results in increasing amounts of 140-kDa receptor becoming bound to the substratum in detergent-insoluble form. However, the amount of receptor bound does not necessarily correlate with the degree of cell adhesion and spreading. Thus, coating the substratum with 5 μg/ml of PB1 results in essentially complete attachment and spreading of CHO cells, but only a small fraction of the 140-kDa receptor becomes substratum bound. Coating with 50 μg/ml of PB1 produces no further increase in cell adhesion and spreading, but results in the detergent-stable association of a large fraction of the total receptor pool with the substratum. These observations suggest the possibility of there being “spare” receptors for cell adhesion processes.  相似文献   

8.
Normal attachment and spreading of baby hamster kidney cells onto a non-living substratum requires the presence of a specific serum component adsorbed to the substratum surface and Ca2+ ions in the medium. In the absence of the adsorbed serum factor or Ca2+ ions cells attach but do not spread. Thus, although the initial rate of BHK cell attachment is faster in serum-free medium than serum-containing medium, no cell spreading occurs in serum-free medium. Adsorption of serum onto the substratum results in a lag phase in the time course of cell attachment which can be eliminated by blocking the negatively charged groups of the serum components adsorbed to the substratum surface; blocking positively charged groups or free sulfhydryl groups of the adsorbed serum components is without effect. The requirement for serum components can be substituted for by adsorbing molecules such as concanavalin A or polycationic ferritin to the substratum surface; however, only ConA results in normal morphology of cell spreading. The data are discussed in terms of a non-electrostatic direct cell-substratum binding model of cell attachment.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The network of actin filaments is one of the crucial cytoskeletal structures contributing to the morphological framework of a cell and which participates in the dynamic regulation of cellular functions. In adherent cell types, cells adhere to the substratum during interphase and spread to assume their characteristic shape supported by the actin cytoskeleton. This actin cytoskeleton is reorganized during mitosis to form rounded cells with increased cortical rigidity. The actin cytoskeleton is re-established after mitosis, allowing cells to regain their extended shape and attachment to the substratum. The modulation of such drastic changes in cell shape in coordination with cell cycle progression suggests a tight regulatory interaction between cytoskeleton signalling, cell–cell/cell–matrix adhesions and mitotic events. Here, we review the contribution of the actin cytoskeleton to cell cycle progression with an emphasis on the effectors responsible for the regulation of the actin cytoskeleton and integration of their activities with the cell cycle machinery.  相似文献   

11.
The insoluble cytoskeletal material remaining after detergent lysis of 'Normal' Murine Mammary Gland (NMuMG) cells, growing on plastic or collagen gel substrata, was analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The identity of the cytoskeletal elements was determined by their solubility properties, electrophoretic separation pattern, and immunoreactivity using monoclonal antibodies against intermediate filament proteins (AIF), keratins (AE1 and AE3) and actin. The electrophoretic pattern of the cytoskeletal elements from the NMuMG cell strain was found to be very similar to that of primary mouse mammary epithelial cells. Both NMuMG and primary mammary epithelial cells when grown on collagen exhibited an increased expression of a 49 kD protein with a pI of 5.6, that appeared to be a cytokeratin. Many of the cytoskeletal proteins remained tightly attached to the collagen gel substratum after cell lysis. These results demonstrate that the NMuMG cell strain has retained a stable expression of cytokeratins that remains responsive to the presence of extracellular matrix material.  相似文献   

12.
The proteolytic enzymes pronase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin and the surfactant Triton X-100 inhibited attachment of Vibrio proteolytica to the hydrophobic substratum polystyrene by >97%. These treatments had no effect on attachment to hydrophilic substrata such as glass or tissue culture dishes. Both pronase and Triton X-100 effected the removal of previously attached cells from polystyrene but not from hydrophilic surfaces. Removal of cells from polystyrene by pronase left material (which we have termed footprints) that stained with the protein-specific stain Hoechst 2495 but not with the DNA-specific stain Hoechst 33342. Pronase treatment also caused a significant decrease in cell surface hydrophobicity as determined by phase partitioning in hexane or petroleum ether. Collectively, these results imply the existence of separate mechanisms for the adhesion of V. proteolytica to hydrophilic and hydrophobic substrata and suggest a role for protein in the latter mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Growth of three established cell lines on glass microcarriers   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Three established cell lines were examined for growth on a newly developed microcarrier which consists of glass beads. The cells were simultaneously exmined for growth on commercially available microcarriers made from DEAE-dextran and from plastic. Cell yields on the glass microcarriers were comparble to the cell yields on the commercially available products. Cells grown on the glass microcarriers were easily separated from the substratum by trypsinization (as were the cells grown on the plastic substratum) while the cells grown on the DEAE-dextran particles were much more trypsin resistant. After removal of cells from the glass microcarriers, the cells reattached and spread out in plastic flasks as readily as cells harvested from monolayer. Scanning electron microscopy revealed dramatic differences in the appearence of the cell grown on the glass microcarriers and cells grown on the DEAE-dextran microcarriers. On the glass microcarriers, cells attached to the substratum through lond, slender filopodia while on the DEAE-dextran microcarriers, the entire edge of the cell appeared to be in contact with the substratum. This dissimilarity in attachment could underly the difference in sensitivity to trypsin-mediated detachment. Finally, the glass microcarriers were washed after being used once and retested for their ability to support cell growth a second time. Nearly identical results were obtained with the reprocessed beads as with previously unused ones.  相似文献   

15.
Fibroblast cells seeded on a serum glycoprotein shown previously to mediate a spread shape without focal adhesions or microfilament bundles (Stage 1 spread) are now shown to have substratum contacts in which coated pits are abundant and associated with small globular deposits of glycocalyx bridging to substratum and staining for fibronectin and acidic glycoconjugates. After stimulation with serum or fibronectin to form focal adhesions and microfilament bundles (Stage 2 spread), clathrin-based structures remain at the cell underside but no longer in conspicuously higher concentration than on the dorsal surface; extracellular material at adhesions is now as regular strands which stain for acidic glycoconjugates but (as reported earlier by Chen and Singer) not always for fibronectin. During these stages of adhesion, striking changes are seen in the cellular display of fibronectin monitored by immunofluorescence. In rounded cells this is granular and cytoplasmic, concentrated around the submembranous cortex; on spreading to Stage 1, it remains granular and intracellular but is now oriented strongly towards the lower cell surface; only in Stage 2 does externalisation proceed to deposit fibrillar fibronectin on the substratum. While cytoplasmic orientation of matrix precursors can be determined by cell contact, organised externalisation is therefore coupled to fully developed adhesion status.  相似文献   

16.
Neural crest cells migrate along pathways containing laminin and other extracellular matrix molecules. In the present study, we functionally and biochemically identify an alpha 1 beta 1 integrin heterodimer which bears the HNK-1 epitope on neural crest cells. Using a quantitative cell adhesion assay, we find that this heterodimer mediates attachment to laminin substrata prepared in the presence of Ca2+. Interestingly, neural crest cells bind to laminin-Ca2+ substrata in the presence or absence of divalent cations in the cell attachment medium. In contrast, the attachment of neural crest cells to laminin substrata prepared in the presence of EDTA, heparin, Mg2+, or Mn2+ requires divalent cations. Interactions with these laminin substrata are mediated by a different integrin heterodimer, since antibodies against beta 1 but not alpha 1 integrins inhibit neural crest cell attachment. Thus, the type of laminin substratum appears to dictate the choice of laminin receptor used by neural crest cells. The laminin conformation is determined by the ratio of laminin to Ca2+, though incorporation of heparin during substratum polymerization alters the conformation even in the presence of Ca2+. Once polymerized, the substratum appears stable, not being altered by soaking in either EDTA or divalent cations. Our findings demonstrate: (a) that the alpha 1 beta 1 integrin can bind to some forms of laminin in the absence of soluble divalent cations; (b) that substratum preparation conditions alter the conformation of laminin such that plating laminin in the presence of Ca2+ and/or heparin modulates its configuration; and (c) that neural crest cells utilize different integrins to recognize different laminin conformations.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanisms of neural crest cell interaction with laminin were explored using a quantitative cell attachment assay. With increasing substratum concentrations, an increasing percentage of neural crest cells adhere to laminin. Cell adhesion at all substratum concentrations was inhibited by the CSAT antibody, which recognizes the chick beta 1 subunit of integrin, suggesting that beta 1-integrins mediate neural crest cell interactions with laminin. The HNK-1 antibody, which recognizes a carbohydrate epitope, inhibited neural crest cell attachment to laminin at low coating concentrations (greater than 1 microgram ml-1; Low-LM), but not at high coating concentration of laminin (10 micrograms ml-1; High-LM). Attachment to Low-LM occurred in the absence of divalent cations, whereas attachment to High-LM required greater than 0.1 mM Ca2+ or Mn2+. Neural crest cell adherence to the E8 fragment of laminin, derived from its long arm, was similar to that on intact laminin at high and low coating concentrations, suggesting that this fragment contains the neural crest cell binding site(s). The HNK-1 antibody recognizes a protein of 165,000 Mr which is also found in immunoprecipitates using antibodies against the beta 1 subunit of integrin and is likely to be an integrin alpha subunit or an integrin-associated protein. Our results suggest that the HNK-1 epitope on neural crest cells is present on or associated with a novel or differentially glycosylated form of beta 1-integrin, which recognizes laminin in the apparent absence of divalent cations. We conclude that neural crest cells have at least two functionally independent means of attachment to laminin which are revealed at different substratum concentrations and/or conformations of laminin.  相似文献   

18.
We used two cell lines expressing fast (RPEfast) and slow (RPEslow) attachment kinetics to investigate mechanisms of cell-substratum adhesion. We show that the abundance of a cytoskeletal protein, vinculin, is dramatically decreased in RPEfast cells. This coincides with the diminished expression level of an endoplasmic reticulum chaperone, calreticulin. Both protein and mRNA levels for calreticulin and vinculin were decreased in RPEfast cells. After RPEfast cells were transfected with cDNA encoding calreticulin, both the expression of endoplasmic reticulum-resident calreticulin and cytoplasmic vinculin increased. The abundance of other adhesion-related proteins was not affected. RPEfast cells underexpressing calreticulin displayed a dramatic increase in the abundance of total cellular phosphotyrosine suggesting that the effects of calreticulin on cell adhesiveness may involve modulation of the activities of protein tyrosine kinases or phosphatases which may affect the stability of focal contacts. The calreticulin and vinculin underexpressing RPEfast cells lacked extensive focal contacts and adhered weakly but attached fast to the substratum. In contrast, the RPEslow cells that expressed calreticulin and vinculin abundantly developed numerous and prominent focal contacts slowly, but adhered strongly. Thus, while the calreticulin overexpressing RPEslow cells "grip" the substratum with focal contacts, calreticulin underexpressing RPEfast cells use close contacts to "stick" to it.  相似文献   

19.
In the present study, we have examined the regulation of attachment, onset of proliferation and the subsequent growth, in vitro, of chick retinal pigmented epithelial (RPE) cells as a function of the nature of the substratum and of either the activation or inhibition of protein kinase C (PKC). The RPE cells have an adhesive preference for protein carpets which contain laminin. This preference disappears gradually with time in culture. The adhesion of RPE cells to fibronectin is shown to be a receptor-mediated process which involves the RGD recognition signal. This study also demonstrates that a PKC activator, 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), affects RPE cell adhesion in a substratum-dependent manner. Exposure of RPE cells to TPA lowers the cell attachment efficacy to ECM protein substrata but does not affect cell attachment to plastic. The onset of cell proliferation is accelerated by TPA on all of the substrata tested. The minimal duration of an effective TPA pulse exerting a long-lasting influence on RPE cell proliferation is between 1.5 and 3.5 hr. Stimulation of cell proliferation by TPA in long-term cultures is independent of the nature of the growth substratum. The acceleration of the onset of cell proliferation by TPA is sensitive to 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine (H7), an inhibitor of conventional PKC, and thus appears to be dependent on the activation of conventional PKC. H7 also affects cell-cell contacts, causing an alteration in the shape (“squaring”) of RPE cells packed into large colonies. Conversely, the effects of TPA on both the attachment and the long-term proliferation of RPE cells are not dependent a conventional PKC isotype, since H7 cannot abolish the influence of TPA on either process. We conclude that the effect of TPA on long-term proliferation of RPE cells is either dependent on a novel PKC isotype or independent of PKC. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Rous sarcoma virus-transformed BHK cells (RSV/B4-BHK) adhere to a fibronectin-coated substratum primarily at specific dot-shaped sites. Such sites contain actin and vinculin and represent close contacts with the substratum as revealed by interference reflection microscopy. Only a few adhesion plaques and actin filament bundles can be detected in these cells as compared to untransformed parental fibroblasts. In thin sections examined with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) these adhesion sites correspond to short protrusions of the ventral cell surface that contact the substratum at their apical portion. These structures, which may represent cellular feet, are therefore called podosomes. By screening a number of different transformed fibroblasts plated on a fibronectin-coated substratum we find that podosomes are common to mammalian and avian cell lines transformed either by Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) or by Fujinami avian sarcoma virus (FSV), whose oncogenes encode specific tyrosine kinases. Using antibodies reacting with phosphotyrosine in immunofluorescence experiments, we show that phosphotyrosine-containing molecules are concentrated in podosomes. Podosomes are not detected in fibroblasts transformed by other retroviruses (Snyder-Theilen sarcoma virus, Abelson leukemia virus and Kirsten sarcoma virus) or by DNA tumor viruses (polyoma, SV40), indicating that podosome-mediated adhesion in transformed fibroblasts is related to the peculiar properties of some oncoproteins and possibly to their tropism for adhesion systems. Podosomes and adhesion plaques, although similar in cytoskeletal protein composition, have different mechanisms and kinetics of formation. Assembly of podosomes, in fact (i) does not require fetal calf serum (FCS) in the adhesion medium, that is necessary for the organization of adhesion plaques; (ii) does not require protein synthesis; and (iii) is insensitive to the ionophore monensin, that prevents adhesion plaque formation. Moreover, during attachment to fibronectin-coated dishes, podosomes appear in the initial phase (60 min) of attachment, while adhesion plaques require a minimum of 180 min. In conclusion podosomes of RSV- and FSV-transformed fibroblasts represent a phenotypic variant of adhesion structures.  相似文献   

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