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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - General Subjects 1976-Dec

Interactions of concanavalin A with chick embryo fibroblasts transformed by Rous sarcoma virus. Study with an RSV mutant thermosensitive for transformation.

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D J Marciani
T Okazaki

Keywords

Abstract

The interactions between concanavalin A and chick embryo fibroblasts, normal and infected with Rous sarcoma virus (RSV-BH) or its thermosensitive mutant RSV-BH-Ta, have been studied. Normal chick embryo cells and RSV-BH transformed cells showed at 4 and 25 degrees C a similar number of concanavalin A receptors per cell. Analysis of the binding data by the Scatchard relation showed that apparent changes in binding as a function of temperature are due to the thermodynamic properties of the process and not to endocytosis. The lectin receptors on the cell surface of normal and RSV-BH infected cells showed homogeneity in their binding properties. Chick cells infected with RSV-BH-Ta showed a lectin binding behavior that was dependent on the temperature at which the cells were grown. At the permissive temperature for transformation (37 degrees C), the binding process was similar to that observed for normal and RSV-BH infected cells. At the nonpermissive temperature (41 degrees C), the cells showed at least two sets of concanavalin A receptors. The new set of receptors on the cell surface had a lower lectin affinity than those observed in the same cells at 37 degrees C. Chick cells infected with RSV-BH showed an enhanced agglutinability by concanavalin A, as compared with normal cells. Cells infected with RSV-BH-Ta showed a reversal of the correlation between increased concanavalin A agglutinability and the transformed state. At the permissive temperature for transformation, the cells were not agglutinable, whereas at the nonpermissive temperature they presented agglutinability indexes as high as those observed with RSV-BH infected cells. This enhanced agglutinability observed with cells maintained at the nonpermissive temperature for transformation may be related to the new set of low affinity receptors present at 41 degrees C.

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