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1.
In the cell adhesion of aggregation-competent Dictyostelium cells, the requirement for the carbohydrate moiety of the glycoprotein appeared to be indirect in that it acts to protect the protein moiety from proteolytic degradation; however, the effect was limited to the tunicamycin (TM)-sensitive carbohydrate moiety (Hirano, T., et al. (1983) J. Biochem. 93, 1249-1257). In the present study, we showed that the EDTA-stable adhesion of aggregation-competent Dictyostelium cells was abolished by the treatment of intact cells with jack bean alpha-mannosidase, whereas neuraminidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, or alpha-L-fucosidase had no effect. The EDTA-stable cohesiveness of TM-treated cells in the presence of leupeptin (TM/LP cells) was also abolished by the treatment of the cells with alpha-mannosidase. The effect of alpha-mannosidase was not prevented in the presence of LP. The N-glycoside-deficient contact site A (an adhesion-mediating glycoprotein) was obtained from TM/LP cells and was shown to have a molecular weight of 70,000. This protein (p 70) was shown to still have carbohydrates as detected by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and subsequent staining of the gel with periodic acid-silver stain. Moreover, p 70 reacted with anti-gp 68, which has a specificity against alpha-mannosyl residues of carbohydrate chains. However, p 70 treated with alpha-mannosidase showed decreased reactivity with anti-gp 68. The monovalent antibody fragment of anti-contact site A or anti-p 70 inhibited EDTA-stable cell adhesion of both control and TM/LP cells. These results indicated that TM-resistant mannosyl residues of contact site A are directly involved in EDTA-stable adhesion of aggregation-competent cells. This is the first report of the direct involvement of the carbohydrate moiety in cell adhesion of aggregation-competent Dictyostelium cells. A schematic model is presented of the role of the carbohydrate moiety in EDTA-stable cell adhesion, including the direct effect of carbohydrates.  相似文献   

2.
The carbohydrate requirement for alignment and fusion of embryonic quail muscle cells has been examined in tissue culture by use of tunicamycin (TM). The mononucleated, spindle-shaped proliferating myoblasts were treated with TM at various times before fusion and differentiation into multinucleated muscle fibers capable of spontaneous contraction. Tm blocked protein glycosylation and expression of glycoproteins on the cell surface, and strongly inhibited fusion when added to cultures of differentiating muscle cells before the fusion "burst," but had no apparent effect on cell alignment. The inhibition of fusion was partially prevented when TM was administered in the presence of protease inhibitors such as leupeptin and pepstatin, but the inhibition of glycosylation was not prevented. Both glycosylation and fusion were completely restored to normal by the removal of the antibiotic from the medium. These studies provide strong support for the idea that myoblast fusion is partially mediated by 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. Our findings do not rule out the possibility that oligosaccharide units of surface glycolipids have some role in myoblast fusion.  相似文献   

3.
Tunicamycin acts on cell aggregation in Dictyostelium discoideum by changing cell movement and by inhibiting the EDTA-stable type of intercellular adhesion. Tunicamycin-treated cells show unco-ordinated pseudopodial activity such that pseudopods are simultaneously extended from all parts of the cell surface, and the cells are unable to move in straight paths. Concurrent with the inhibition of formation of EDTA-stable contacts, N-glycosylation of a glycoprotein specific for aggregation-competent cells is inhibited. This glycoprotein, previously called contact site A, has an apparent mol. wt. of 80 kilodaltons (kd). In membranes of tunicamycin-treated cells, two components are detected that react with certain monoclonal antibodies against contact sites A: one component of 66 kd, the other of 53 kd apparent mol. wt. Another group of monoclonal antibodies reacts only with the 80-kd glycoprotein and the 66-kd component. These results are in accord with the assumption that the glycoprotein carries two carbohydrate chains, and that the antibodies differ in their requirement for glycosylation of the antigen. Despite the coincidence between blockage of EDTA-stable cell adhesion and inhibited glycosylation of contact sites A, direct involvement of the carbohydrate moieties of this glycoprotein in intercellular adhesion seems questionable. EDTA-stable cell adhesion has not been blocked by Fab fragments from antibodies that specifically react with the glycosylated protein.  相似文献   

4.
Two different types of oligosaccharides, designated type 1 and 2 carbohydrate residues, are present on the contact site A molecule, an 80-kDa glycoprotein involved in the formation of EDTA-stable cell adhesion during cell aggregation in Dictyostelium discoideum. The first precursor detected by pulse-chase labeling with [35S]methionine was a 68-kDa glycoprotein carrying type 1 carbohydrate. Conversion of the precursor into the 80-kDa form occurred simultaneously with the addition of type 2 carbohydrate. Tunicamycin inhibited type 1 glycosylation more efficiently than type 2 glycosylation. The first precursor detected in tunicamycin-treated cells by pulse-chase labeling was a 53-kDa protein lacking both carbohydrates, which was converted through addition of type 2 carbohydrate into a 66-kDa final product. Labeling of intact cells indicated that this 66-kDa glycoprotein is transported to the cell surface. Prolonged treatment with tunicamycin resulted in the accumulation within the cells of the 53-kDa precursor with no detectable exposure of this protein on the cell surface. It is concluded that type 1 carbohydrate, which is cotranslationally added in N-glycosidic linkages, is neither required for transport of the protein to the Golgi apparatus nor for type 2 glycosylation or protection of the protein against proteolytic degradation. Incapability of tunicamycin-treated cells of forming EDTA-stable cell contacts suggests a role for type 1 carbohydrate in cell adhesion. Type 2 carbohydrate is added posttranslationally. It is required in the absence of type 1 glycosylation for transport of the protein to the cell surface.  相似文献   

5.
Antisera against purified contact site A glycoprotein, with an apparent molecular weight of 80 X 10(3) (80 kDa), from Dictyostelium discoideum were raised by using Freund's adjuvant (antiserum-A) and by using Alu-Gel-S (antiserum-B) as immunoadjuvants. They were converted into Fab fragments for the cell agglutination assay. Fab fragments of antiserum-B inhibited only EDTA-stable cell contact, whereas Fab fragments of antiserum-A (Fab-A) inhibited EDTA-sensitive cell contact as well as EDTA-stable cell contact. We prepared several cell types in order to identify target antigens for the adhesion-blocking Fab-A in EDTA-sensitive cell contact or EDTA-stable cell contact. One of these cell types produced contact site A without N-glycosidically-linked carbohydrate chains. It is known that contact site A contains two kinds of N-glycosidically-linked carbohydrate chains (carbohydrates I and II, Yoshida, M., Stadler, J., Bertholdt, G., and Gerisch, G. (1984) EMBO J. 3, 2653-2670). When growth-phase cells were treated with tunicamycin (TM) at a final concentration of 2 micrograms/ml in nutrient medium (TM-pretreated cells), the cells produced contact site A without N-glycosidically-linked carbohydrate chains (53 kDa) at the normal developmental stage. These cells lacked EDTA-sensitive cell contact as well as EDTA-stable cell contact. The neutralization of the adhesion-blocking Fab-A was done by using particulate fractions from each cell type. The blocking activity in EDTA-stable cell contact was neutralized by the cell type with carbohydrate II. Taking these results into consideration, EDTA-stable cell contact may be formed by the interaction between protein moieties of contact site A and carbohydrate II. Concerning EDTA-sensitive cell contact, the blocking activity was neutralized by each cell type irrespective of TM treatment. This suggests that O-glycosidically-linked carbohydrate chains play a role in EDTA-sensitive cell contact. Moreover, the biological activity in EDTA-sensitive cell contact of TM-pretreated cells suggests that N-glycosidically-linked carbohydrate chains may also be involved in this contact.  相似文献   

6.
Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), a lectin that primarily reacts with N-acetylglucosamine residues, specifically inhibits the EDTA-stable type of intercellular adhesion of aggregation competent Dictyostelium discoideum cells. The major WGA-binding protein of these cells is a developmentally-regulated glycolipoprotein of 80 kd apparent mol. wt., designated as contact site A. This glycoprotein is a target site of antibody fragments that block the EDTA-stable cell adhesion, and is characterized by sulfated carbohydrate residues. WGA does not significantly bind to glycoproteins of a mutant, HL220, which produces a 68-kd component in place of the 80-kd glycoprotein. Inhibition of N-glycosylation by tunicamycin causes wild-type cells to produce a WGA-binding but unsulfated 66-kd component and a non-binding 53-kd component. These results indicate that the 80-kd glycoprotein contains two classes of carbohydrate residues, a WGA-binding one that is defective in HL220, and another, sulfated, one that is absent from the 66-kd wild-type product; both are missing in the 53-kd protein. WGA and a monoclonal antibody that is blocked by N-acetylglucosamine were further used to probe for glycoproteins in the multicellular slug stage that share carbohydrate structures - and possibly functions - with the contact site A glycoprotein. Glycoproteins in the 95-kd range have previously been implicated in cell-to-cell adhesion during the slug stage. We distinguished a 95-kd glycoprotein that binds WGA from another one that binds antibody.  相似文献   

7.
The stage-specific antigen, gp68 (Hirano, T., Yamada, H., & Miyazaki, T. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 742, 224-234), was purified from a phenol/water extract of aggregation-competent cells of Dictyostelium discoideum by preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Anti-gp68 was produced against purified gp68 which was determined to be homogeneous by silver staining on analysis by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The cross-reactivity of anti-gp68 against cellular antigens was estimated by immuno-affinity chromatography on anti-gp68 immunoglobulin G (IgG)/Sepharose. When the whole cell lysate was applied to this affinity column, three major proteins, with molecular weights of 80,000, 68,000, and 56,000, were obtained in the absorbed fraction. When the butanol extract, which was enriched in contact site A, an adhesion mediating glycoprotein, was applied to the same column, two major proteins with molecular weights of 80,000 (corresponding to contact site A) and 56,000 were obtained in the absorbed fraction but, however, gp68 was negligible. Reversely, when the phenol/water extract was applied to anti-contact site A-IgG/Sepharose, only gp68 was obtained in the absobed fraction. Moreover, contact site A was seen to compete with [3H]mannose-labeled gp68 in a competition radioimmunoassay using anti-gp68 serum. The effect of Pronase or exo-alpha-mannosidase digestion on the antigenic activity of gp68 was examined by radioimmunoassaying. The results indicated that the alpha-mannosyl residue of the non-reducing terminal in the carbohydrate moiety of gp68 was a major immunodeterminant. However, the polypeptide chain did not participate in the antigenic reactivity against anti-gp68. Both anti-gp68 and anti-contact site A agglutinated heat killed-yeast cells. Also, both anti-sera inhibited EDTA-stable cell adhesion of aggregation-competent cells in the presence of Fab from goat anti-rabbit IgG. These results indicate that gp68 and contact site A have a common antigenic determinant against anti-gp68, and that the target antigen of anti-gp68 was somehow involved in cell adhesion.  相似文献   

8.
In Dictyostelium discoideum, a surface glycoprotein with Mr 80,000 (gp80) has been found to mediate the EDTA-resistant contact sites A at the aggregation stage of development. To evaluate the role of the carbohydrate moiety in cell-cell adhesion, we have examined the accumulation and activity of an altered gp80 molecule in two glycosylation (modB) mutants. Both mutants synthesize an altered gp80 of lower molecular size. This modB-gp80 can be detected by the monoclonal antibody 80L5C4, which is capable of blocking cell-cell adhesion (C. -H. Siu, T. Y. Lam, and A. Choi, (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 16,030-16,036). The mutant cells exhibit both EDTA-sensitive and EDTA-resistant types of cell-cell binding, though to a lesser extent than that of the parental strain, and the EDTA-resistant binding sites are blocked in the presence of 80L5C4 Fab. Mutant cells can also bind Covaspheres conjugated with gp80. These results suggest that the modB-gp80 protein still retains the domain essential for its cell binding activity and the carbohydrate moiety affected by the modB mutation is not directly involved in cell-cell adhesion.  相似文献   

9.
An 80-kDa glycoprotein of Dictyostelium discoideum, designated contact site A, has been implicated in EDTA-stable cell adhesion. This protein is known to be the major sulfated protein of aggregation-competent cells and has been shown to contain two types of carbohydrate, sulfated type 1 and unsulfated type 2 carbohydrate moieties. Here we investigate the cell-free sulfation of this protein. In the homogenate of developing cells, [35S]sulfate was transferred by endogenous sulfotransferase from [35S]3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate to the contact site A glycoprotein and to various other endogenous proteins. The sulfate was transferred to carbohydrate rather than to tyrosine residues. After differential centrifugation of the homogenate, the capacity for sulfation of the contact site A glycoprotein was barely detected in the plasma membrane-enriched 10,000 X g pellet fraction which contained the bulk of this glycoprotein, but was largely recovered in the 100,000 X g pellet fraction which contained only a small portion of this glycoprotein. After sucrose gradient centrifugation, the membranes containing the sulfation capacity were found to have a density characteristic for Golgi membranes. In immunoblots, monoclonal antibodies raised against the contact site A glycoprotein recognized not only this 80-kDa protein, but also a sulfatable 68-kDa protein found in the 100,000 X g pellet fraction. The 68-kDa protein did not react with monoclonal antibodies against type 2 carbohydrate but was converted by endoglycosidases F and H into a 53-kDa protein, indicating that it was a partially glycosylated form of the 80-kDa glycoprotein containing only type 1 carbohydrate. Isoelectric focusing showed that a substantial portion of the 68-kDa glycoprotein was unsulfated, even after cell-free sulfation. The 68-kDa glycoprotein was not found in the plasma membrane-enriched 10,000 X g pellet fraction and did not accumulate in parallel with the 80-kDa contact site A glycoprotein during cell development. We conclude that the 68-kDa glycoprotein is a precursor that is converted by attachment of type 2 carbohydrate and sulfation of type 1 carbohydrate into the mature 80-kDa glycoprotein. The precursor nature of the 68-kDa glycoprotein was supported by results obtained with mutant HL220 which is defective in glycosylation (Murray, B. A., Wheeler, S., Jongens, T., and Loomis, W. F. (1984) Mol. Cell. Biol. 4, 514-519). This mutant specifically lacks type 2 carbohydrate and produces a 68-Kda glycoprotein instead of the 80-kDa contact site A glycoprotein (Yoshida, M., Stadler, J., Bertholdt, G., and Gerisch, G. (1984) EMBO J. 3, 2663-2670).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Astrocyte and glial-neuron interactions have a critical role in brain development, which is partially mediated by glycoproteins, including adhesion molecules and growth factors. Ethanol affects the synthesis, intracellular transport, subcellular distribution and secretion of these glycoproteins, suggesting alterations in glycosylation. We analyzed the effect of long-term exposure to low doses of ethanol (30 mm) on glycosylation process in growing cultured astrocytes in vitro. Cells were incubated for short (5 min) and long (90 min) periods with several radioactively labeled carbohydrate precursors. The uptake, kinetics and metabolism of these precursors, as well as the radioactivity distribution in protein gels were analyzed. The levels of GLUT1 and mannosidase II were also determined. Ethanol increased the uptake of monosaccharides and the protein levels of GLUT1 but decreased those of mannosidase II. It altered the carbohydrate moiety of proteins and increased cell surface glycoproteins containing terminal non-reduced mannose. These results indicate that ethanol impairs glycosylation in rat astrocytes, thus disrupting brain development.  相似文献   

11.
Functional properties of carbohydrate-depleted tissue plasminogen activator   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In order to evaluate the importance of the carbohydrate moiety of human tissue plasminogen activator (TPA), human melanoma (Bowes) cells were treated with a glycosylation inhibitor, tunicamycin (TM), and cellular fractions were assayed for fibrinolytic activity. Where glycosylation was inhibited by 90% and protein synthesis by 30%, TPA specific activity measured by fibrinolytic assays decreased 6-10-fold in the tissue culture medium and cell cytosol with a concomitant 2-fold increase in the 100000g microsomal pellet. In addition, TPA purified to apparent homogeneity was treated with endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H (Endo-H), producing a fraction that in contrast to native TPA did not adsorb to concanavalin A-Sepharose (Con A-Sepharose). This fraction represented TPA from which 85-90% of N-linked carbohydrate residues had been removed. Native TPA effectively activated plasminogen in the presence of fibrin (Km = 1 microM, kcat = 0.09 s-1) whereas saturation of the enzyme was not achieved at 100 microM plasminogen in the absence of fibrin. Glycosidase-treated and native TPA activated plasminogen at identical high rates in the presence and at identical negligible rates in the absence of fibrin. These studies indicate that the inhibition of glycosylation of TPA results in the inhibition of secretion of the molecule as has been observed for some other glycoproteins. The enzymatic removal of N-linked carbohydrate from purified TPA does not change its unique fibrin-directed properties.  相似文献   

12.
We have analyzed the requirement for the expression of the major surface glycoprotein (G protein) of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) on target cells for recognition and lysis by anti-VSV cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). In addition, we have attempted to determine if the carbohydrate moieties on the G protein are required for recognition and lysis by anti-VSV CTL. When VSV (Orsay) is grown at 30 degrees C in the presence of tunicamycin (TM), glycosylation of G protein is inhibited; however, nonglycosylated G protein is found on the surface of the cell and active virus particles are produced. In contrast, VSV (Orsay) grown at 39 degrees C in the presence of TM produces low titers of virus and the presence of G protein on the surface of cells is not detectable. The susceptibility of these target cells to lysis by anti-VSV CTL was analyzed. The results suggest that expression of the G protein is required for target cell lysis by anti-VSV CTL. However, the presence of the carbohydrate moieties on the G protein are nt an absolute requirement for recognition by anti-VSV CTL. VSV-infected target cells incubated in the presence of TM were lysed by anti-VSV CTL up to 50 to 80% of the infected target cell control. This result suggests either that some clones of anti-VSV CTL recognize carbohydrate moieties or that carbohydrate moieties play some as yet undefined nonantigenic role in the recognition of the target antigen by the CTL receptor.  相似文献   

13.
《Cell differentiation》1979,8(2):117-127
The soluble fraction of exponential phase cells inhibits differentiation and aggregation in cells of Dictyostelium discoideum. Lower inhibitor activities have been found in aggregation-competent cells than in growth phase cells. The inhibitor has a molecular weight between 1000 and 1300, as determined on Sephadex G-25. It is stable against heat, alkali and acid, and resists periodate and pronase treatment. Three biochemical processes accompanying cell differentiation have been shown to be blocked by the inhibitor: the increase of adenylyl cyclase activity, the formation of EDTA-stable cell contacts, and the release of an inhibitor of cyclic-AMP phosphodieterase into the extracellular medium.  相似文献   

14.
To assess the role in cell-cell adhesion of gp64, a putative cell-cell adhesion molecule ofPolysphondylium pallidum, we treated the cells with tunicamycin (TM), a known inhibitor of the synthesis of the N-linked oligosaccharide precursor, and examined TM's effect on cell-cell adhesion. The vegetative growth ofPolysphondylium cells was inhibited with TM in a dose-dependent manner. When cells were treated with TM (2.0 μg/ml) during only the first 4 hr of starvation and further starved for 8 hr without TM, the cells dissociated considerably, although even the growth phase cells ofPolysphondylium normally show EDTA-resistant (Ca2+-independent) cell adhesions. In parallel with the above effects, the amounts of intact gp64 decreased considerably in time with the lengths of incubation (0 hr>4 hr >8 hr). When TM-treated cells were washed free of TM, and shaken for a further 12 hr, the cells began to aggregate again, accompanied by an increase of gp64. In conclusion, TM affected cell-cell adhesion ofPolysphondylium cells, but we were not able to distinguish whether the inhibition of cell aggregation was due to defects in glycosylation on glycoproteins and/or due to reduced levels of glycoproteins themselves.  相似文献   

15.
Tunicamycin (TM), an antibiotic that inhibits the formation of N-acetylglucosamine-lipid intermediates, thereby preventing the glycosylation of newly synthesized glycoproteins, inhibits the growth of Sindbis virus and vesicular stomatitis virus in BHK cells. At 0.5 mug of TM per ml, the replication of both viruses is inhibited 99.9%. Noninfectious particles were not detected. All the viral proteins were synthesized in the presence of TM, but the glycoproteins were selectively altered in that they migrated faster than normal viral glycoproteins when analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, suggesting defective glycosylation. Within 1 h after TM addition, [14C]glucosamine incorporation into glycoproteins was inhibited 20%, whereas [35S]methionine incorporation was unaffected. By 2 to 3 h after TM addition, glucosamine incorporation had fallen to 15% of control value, with methionine incorporation being 60% of normal. TM did not affect the growth of the nomenveloped encephalomyocarditis virus in BHK cells, demonstrating that TM is not a general inhibitor of protein synthesis. These data demonstrate that TM specifically inhibits the glycosylation of viral glycoproteins and that glycosylation may be essential for the normal assembly of enveloped viral particles.  相似文献   

16.
A cell surface glycoprotein of apparent Mr 150,000 (gp150) has been implicated in mediating EDTA-resistant cell-cell adhesion in Dictyostelium discoideum. A simple purification scheme making use of high-performance liquid chromatography has been devised to purify gp150 to near homogeneity. Purified gp150 was capable of neutralizing the effect of a rabbit antiserum raised against gel-purified gp150, which was previously reported to be a potent inhibitor of cell-cell adhesion (Geltosky, J. E., Weseman, J., Bakke, A., and Lerner, R. A. (1979) Cell 18, 391-398). The binding of 125I-labeled gp150 to intact cells was both dose-dependent and saturable, demonstrating the presence of specific cell surface binding sites for gp150. When reassociation of postaggregation stage cells was carried out in the presence of soluble gp150, aggregate formation was strongly inhibited. In contrast, gp150 failed to exert any effect on cells at the aggregation stage. The inhibitory effect of gp150 was sensitive to protease treatment, suggesting that the protein moiety is crucial to gp150 function. These results, taken together, provide direct evidence that gp150 is a cell-cell adhesion molecule involved in cell-cell binding in the postaggregation stage of Dictyostelium development.  相似文献   

17.
J Faix  G Gerisch    A A Noegel 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(9):2709-2716
The contact site A (csA) glycoprotein is a developmentally regulated cell adhesion molecule which mediates EDTA-stable cell contacts during the aggregation stage of Dictyostelium discoideum. A transformation vector was constructed which allows overexpression of the csA protein during the growth phase. In that stage the csA protein is normally not expressed; in the transformants it was transported to the cell surface and carried all modifications investigated, including a phospholipid anchor and two types of oligosaccharide chain. csA expression enabled the normal non-aggregative growth-phase cells to form EDTA-stable contacts in suspension and to assemble into three-dimensional aggregates when moving on a substratum. After prolonged cultivation of csA overexpressing transformants in nutrient medium the developmental program was found to be turned on, as it normally occurs only in starving cells. During later development of transformed cells, the csA glycoprotein remained present on the cell surface, while it is down-regulated in the wild type. It was detected in both the prestalk and prespore regions of the multicellular slugs made from transformed cells.  相似文献   

18.
2-Deoxyglucose and glucosamine were found to inhibit cell fusion caused by a syncytial mutant of herpes simplex virus and to inhibit the glycosylation of viral glycoproteins in the infected cells. The inhibition of fusion and the inhibition of glycosylation caused by 2-deoxyglucose were substantially prevented when mannose was also present during infection. When glycosylation was inhibited, three new bands were found in major glycoprotein region on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. These bands may be precursors to the normal glycoproteins. The correlation between fusion and glycosylation in the presence of 2-deoxyglucose, glucosamine, and mannose suggests that the cells cannot fuse if their glycoproteins have a considerably reduced carbohydrate content.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated the effect of tunicamycin (TM), an inhibitor of protein glycosylation, on surface Na+ channels in cultured chick skeletal muscle cells. The expression of Na+ channels, estimated by the measurement of batrachotoxin (BTX)-activated 22Na+ uptake, was found to be significantly diminished after exposure of muscle cells to TM. This effect is partially reversed by the protease inhibitor leupeptin and is associated with a markedly enhanced rate of disappearance of Na+ channels from the surface of TM-treated cells. Our findings suggest that protein glycosylation contributes to the metabolic stability of voltage-sensitive Na+ channels.  相似文献   

20.
J E Geltosky  J Weseman  A Bakke  R A Lerner 《Cell》1979,18(2):391-398
Analysis of the composition of cell surface-associated glycoproteins of D. discoideum by lactoper-oxidase-catalyzed radioiodination, followed by isolation by Con A-Sepharose chromatography, revealed that the developmentally regulated cell surface expression of a certain glycoprotein (gp150) parallels the onset of mutual cellular cohesiveness (Geltosky, Siu and Lerner, 1976). We have purified gp150 and raised specific antibodies to it. Through utilization of the specific antibody and a fluorescence-activated cell sorter, the expression of gp150 on the cell surface has been studied. Starting from a low level in noncohesive (vegetative) cells, there is a rapid accumulation of gp150 on the surfaces of aggregating cells. A peak level of expression is achieved by 10 hr and maintained at least until the steps of terminal differentiation. Most significantly, monovalent Fa'b derived from anti-gp150, when added to aggregation-competent cells, blocks the cells' ability to reaggregate. Fab's derived from antisera with different specificities were ineffective inhibitors of cell aggregation. These results suggest that gp150 serves an intimate role in cell adhesion.  相似文献   

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