Membrane glycoproteins involved in cell-substratum adhesion

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Abstract

A combination of immunological and biochemical methods were used to identify surface membrane components involved in cell-substratum adhesion. Broad-spectrum antiserum, prepared against surface membranes from hamster cells, induced reversible rounding and detachment of hamster fibroblasts from a substratum in vitro. This phenomenon was inhibited by Nonidet P-40 extracts of hamster cells. Therefore, an antibody neutralization assay was developed to detect the presence of antigen during the fractionation of Nonidet P-40 extracts of cells. After two differential precipitation steps, anion exchange chromatography, and sequential lectin affinity chromatography, a fraction greatly enriched in ability to block antiserum-induced changes in cell adhesion and appearance was isolated. Analysis of this fraction by NaDodSO4/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a highly restricted group of glycoproteins with M(r) ≃140,000. A lectin-purified glycoprotein fraction was used to raise a higher titer anti-serum that was able to induce reversible rounding and detachment of cells from a substratum and, when immobilized on an antibody affinity column, was able to bind and release material capable of blocking antiserum-induced cell rounding. These methods have allowed us to focus attention on a restricted group of glycoproteins that are integral constituents of the surface membrane and which play some as yet undetermined role in the process of cell-substratum adhesion.

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Knudsen, K. A., Rao, P. E., Damsky, C. H., & Buck, C. A. (1981). Membrane glycoproteins involved in cell-substratum adhesion. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 78(10 I), 6071–6075. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.78.10.6071

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